unswervingly 的 3 个定义
swerved, swerv·ing.
- to turn aside abruptly in movement or direction; deviate suddenly from the straight or direct course.
swerved, swerv·ing.
- to cause to turn aside: Nothing could swerve him.
- an act of swerving; turning aside.
unswervingly 近义词
等同于 smack-dab
等同于 directly
unswervingly 的近义词 17 个
- precisely
- straight
- direct
- as a crow flies
- beeline
- dead
- due
- exactly
- plump
- right
- slam bang
- slap
- smack
- smack dab
- straightly
- undeviatingly
- without deviation
unswervingly 的反义词 1 个
更多unswervingly例句
- The term “New Western Dry Gin,” coined more than 10 years ago by Ryan Magarian — one of the founders of Aviation Gin, itself a big swerve away from the classic gin profile — is often used to describe them.
- Set in the verdant Klamath River Valley amidst a backdrop of orchard trees and the blue swerve of the river itself lies a homey, two-story yurt perfect for a fairytale family vacation.
- At an earlier Global Citizen telethon, she covered Barbra Streisand’s “People,” a swerve if I’ve ever heard one from an entertainer not traditionally known for being a vocalist.
- Motorcycles roar and swerve around women who balance soaring bundles confidently on their heads.
- They kept the Portuguese in check, matching them tackle for tackle, swerve for swerve.
- This kind of swerve has been ventured before and it led to an electoral dead end.
- Barnes supplies no explanation or justification for its unusual construction, for the unannounced swerve from fact to fiction.
- The Swerve won the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Award.
- Black Hood brought the car around in a wide sweeping turn to head back toward the gate, had to swerve to avoid hitting Joe Strong.
- At this juncture Dale burst into the saloon, suddenly to check his impetus, to swerve aside toward the bar and halt.
- He might certainly challenge earth or heaven, things present or things to come, to swerve him from this grand allegiance.
- He missed the rider by the fraction of an inch, but saw the machine swerve and heard the soft thud of something falling.
- Was it not life itself to feel beneath his limbs the old familiar swerve, and swing and long elastic bound?