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whereabout

/hwair-uh-bout, wair-/US // ˈʰwɛər əˌbaʊt, ˈwɛər- //

怎么样,哪来的,哪有

Definitions

adv.副词 adverb
  1. 1
    • : whereabouts.

Examples

  • Skydweller will be able to carry payloads of up to 800 pounds—and they’ll most likely consist of radar and camera equipment, as the US Navy is funding a demo of the aircraft as a surveillance tool for monitoring the whereabouts of ships.

  • In some cases, the conservator assumes responsibility for the vulnerable person’s finances or their “person” — their daily activities and whereabouts.

  • Under the traditional manual approach, investigators looking for people who may have been infected ask patients to trace their whereabouts and activities through phone calls and interviews.

  • She made an app called Just Us that allows people stopped by police to instantly start live-streaming while letting trusted contacts know about their whereabouts.

  • As for Luna 3, the actual probe that photographed the far side of the moon, its whereabouts are “not quite clear,” Krebs, the space historian, wrote in an email to me.

  • Might I be permitted most respectfully to inquire whereabout this same old Starosty may be located?

  • The lawyer then sent for Mr. Sharp, the officer before employed, and commissioned him to track the young man's whereabout.

  • Lucretia had none of the sweet feminine habits which betray so lovelily the whereabout of women.

  • And in another moment Mrs. Mivers was heard bustling, scolding, till all trace of her whereabout was gone from the eyes of Helen.

  • Does any one wish to know whereabout on this rolling sphere Rice Corner is situated?