wartime / ˈwɔrˌtaɪm /
💦中学词汇战时战争时期抗战时期抗战期间
wartime 的 2 个定义
n. 名词 noun- a time or period of war: Strict travel regulations apply only in wartime.
adj. 形容词 adjective- caused by, characteristic of, or occurring during war: wartime shortages.
更多wartime例句
- It can affect societies as a whole after a communal trauma like wartime or pandemic.
- Understanding the convergence of Lincoln and Douglass is essential for understanding slavery’s wartime demise.
- In wartime, he believed, patriots supported the president, whether they’d voted for him.
- Butterfield said that as her father aged, he continued to experience impaired balance, likely caused by the wartime injury to his feet.
- It may not be a Spitfire’s Merlin V12, but its design definitely descends from the know-how that built Merlins in wartime.
- This is not lost on their commander, Rama (Shani Klein), an aspiring military careerist who looks down on frivolity in wartime.
- As his later wartime record would show, Jackson was extremely competent in the many skills required of a commanding general.
- It would inject a threat of accountability into power, and upend the impunity wartime leaders had operated under for years.
- Schwend denied any current counterfeiting activity, but divulged his wartime role to the Peruvians.
- Wartime shortages, coupled with imperfections, limited the production of British currency.
- The wartime pressing needs of the industrial enterprises have caused the barriers to be removed.
- In Wallace's latest story a wartime setting is given to the fascinating Labrador stage.
- In wartime, bars are let down, no one can look with disfavor on the factories making the weapons.
- The Germans can do what they like in wartime, and these were some of the things they liked.
- Life in wartime in a country where the war is consists largely in getting used to things that are abnormal and unusual.