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请输入英文单字,中文词皆可:

ager    音标拼音: ['edʒɚ]
老化器; 蒸化机

老化器; 蒸化机


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英文字典中文字典相关资料:


  • nouns - Is the hyphenated form teen-ager correct? Still used . . .
    These results hardly prove that teenager passed teen-ager in popularity in the 1950s, but they do indicate a major shift in proportionate use of teenager and teen-ager in the 1950s compared with the 1940s When did reference works start favoring 'teenager' over 'teen-ager'?
  • What is the difference between aged and age?
    Per the Macmillan dictionary, aged is an adjective: aged, adj : someone who is aged 18, 35, 70, etc is 18, 35, 70, etc years old A woman aged 50 has given birth to twins Men aged between 18 and 35 are most at risk from violent crime In the second case, a group of students that are of college age are college age (not college aged) students Note the preponderance of college age over
  • Anxious to versus eager to - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    ADDED: Nohat's response below answers my question: The non-anxious sense of "anxious to" is common enough to have made it into at least some dictionaries I note that the New Oxford American Dictionary (bundled with Mac OS X) doesn't include this sense of "anxious to" In fact they have a usage note that reads Anxious and eager both mean 'looking forward to something,' but they have different
  • What is the origin of the half your age, plus seven phrase?
    To me, the question reads as a "What is the origin of this quotation proverb saying?" query Such questions—for example, Origin first known use of the phrase 'I've got some good news and some bad news' —generally encounter little opposition on grounds that they aren't on topic at EL U, and I don't see why this one should be viewed as fundamentally different from them
  • british english - Is used in anger a Britishism for something . . .
    On a different board, someone referred to a computer language that had achieved popularity beyond the academic world as "used in anger", the way a shot fired in combat instead of on the practice ra
  • Word or short phrase to describe an individual who does not tend . . .
    I'm looking for a good way to express the concept of someone whose natural predisposition tends towards less extremes of emotion than the average person; they get less sad when bad things happen, l
  • word choice - Angry with vs. angry at vs. angry on - English . . .
    I am a South-Indian and I was recently confused about this usage - "angry on" vs "angry with" vs "angry at" someone I understand that "angry with" someone is the correct usage However I realized that "angry on someone" is a direct translation from Tamil, a South Indian language
  • Terms to describe age groups - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    I have three age groups that I want to distinguish in my research project They are as follows: 18-45 years - I have called this group young adults 46-65 years - I have called this group adults 66
  • Which is correct, from a young age or from young age?
    Consider this example: People tend to understand and use sarcasm from a young age People tend to understand and use sarcasm from young age Which one of these is grammatically correct an
  • Word for not wanting to do something because you have been told to do . . .
    What’s the psychological effect of when someone tells you to do something, and even if you were already planning on doing it and getting ready to, the second they tell you to, you just despise the





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