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upwind

/adverb, adjective uhp-wind; noun uhp-wind/US // adverb, adjective ˈʌpˈwɪnd; noun ˈʌpˌwɪnd //UK // (ˈʌpˈwɪnd) //

逆风,上风,顺风,上风向

Definitions

adv.副词 adverb
  1. 1
    • : toward or against the wind or the direction from which it is blowing: The hunters stalked upwind.
adj.形容词 adjective
  1. 1
    • : moving or situated toward or in the direction from which the wind is blowing: an upwind leap; the upwind portions of the aircraft.
n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : a wind that blows against one's course or up a slope.

Examples

  • At one point, the owner of a neighboring farm spread manure on the field upwind, suffusing the area with its stench for days.

  • “When we’re done, it will be like this well was never here,” Shuck said, standing upwind as cement was pumped hundreds of feet down, through a series of pipes stuck in the 7½-inch-wide hole like a straw in a juice box.

  • The whalers’ observations from the time suggest that they may have also been escaping upwind or attacking the whaling boats.

  • Blocks of snow were cut and arranged in a semicircle, within which the tent was laid with its peak upwind.

  • I was the upwind wheeler and had to hitch on to the side of the sledge to reduce the leeway as much as possible.

  • The sail was up and, while braking the load upwind, I slipped and fell, allowing the sledge to collide with a large sastruga.

  • Ten minutes later he started the motor, and headed upwind into the haze over the hills.

  • Smoke from the flung bomb upwind barely swirled around him and missed Maril altogether.