bore概况

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vi. 钻孔

vt. 钻孔;使烦扰

n. 孔;令人讨厌的人

n. (Bore)人名;(法)博尔;(塞、马里)博雷

bore词义

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vt.

令人厌烦;钻孔;用钻、挖或掘的方式打通;

vi.

挖洞;钻孔;稳步前进;挤过去

n.

使人讨厌的人[物];高潮;膛径,口径;钻子

变形

复数:bores过去式:bored过去分词:bored现在分词:boring第三人称单数:bores

双语释义

v.(动词)

vt. 令人厌烦 make (sb) tired and uninterested by being dull or tedious

vt. & vi. 挖,掘,钻,开凿(洞、井、隧道等) make (a hole, well, tunnel, etc.) with a revolving toll or by digging

n.(名词)

[C]令人讨厌的人〔事物〕,麻烦 person or thing that bores; nuisance

英英释义

bore[ bɔ: ]

n.

a person who evokes boredom

同义词:dullard

a high wave (often dangerous) caused by tidal flow (as by colliding tidal currents or in a narrow estuary)

同义词:tidal boreeagreaegireager

diameter of a tube or gun barrel

同义词:gaugecalibercalibre

a hole or passage made by a drill; usually made for exploratory purposes

同义词:bore-holedrill hole

v.

cause to be bored

同义词:tire

make a hole with a pointed power or hand tool

同义词:drill

bore用法

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词汇搭配

用作动词 (v.)

副词+~

easily bore钻起来容易

well bore好钻

~+副词

bore on前进

~+介词

bore by使…厌烦

bore to厌烦到某种程度

bore with对…感到厌烦

用作名词 (n.)

形容词+~

crashing bore讨厌之极的人〔事〕

frightful bore非常讨厌的家伙

utter bore极惹人厌烦的事

词组短语

bore hole钻孔;炮眼

bore diameter孔径,内径

cylinder bore缸膛

full bore贯眼;等径孔道;全孔射击

tidal bore涌潮,怒潮;潮津波

bore out钻孔;证实;显出

双语例句

用作动词(v.)

He bored us all by talking for hours about his new house.
他连续几个小时大谈他的新房子,使我们大家都厌烦透了。

They are going to bore a tunnel through this mountain.
他们打算开凿一条穿越此山的隧道。

This drill can bore through rock.
这台钻机能钻透岩石。

Worms have bored into the wood.
虫子已经蛀穿了木料。

He used a drill to bore a hole in the door.
他用钻在门上钻孔。

The mole bored (its way) underground.
鼹鼠在地下挖掘(路)。

His blue eyes seemed to bore into her.
他的一双蓝眼睛似乎要穿透她。

用作名词(n.)

He was making a bore of himself.
他快要使自己变成一个惹人讨厌的人物了。

She has become an awful bore since she got married to him.
她自从和他结婚后,就变得令人厌烦透了。

It's a bore having to go out again.
又要外出真是讨厌。

Place the relief valve seat back into the chamber bore.
将安全阀阀座放回到镗孔内。

权威例句

Bioenergetics of intact human muscle. A 31P nuclear magnetic resonance study

First visualization of glutamate and GABA in neurones by immunocytochemistry

Synthetic Oleanane and Ursane Triterpenoids with Modified Rings A and C:  A Series of Highly Active Inhibitors of Nitric Oxide Prod...

CHARMM: the biomolecular simulation program.

CHARMM: the biomolecular simulation program. J Comput Chem 30:1545

Activation tagging identifies a conserved MYB regulator of phenylpropanoid biosynthesis.

Aortic heart valve catheter

Comparison of Video Shot Boundary Detection Techniques

The extent of linkage disequilibrium in Arabidopsis thaliana

Reduced social interaction and ultrasonic communication in a mouse model of monogenic heritable autism.

bore词源

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bore

bore: Bore ‘make a hole’ [OE] and bore ‘be tiresome’ [18] are almost certainly two distinct words. The former comes ultimately from an Indo-European base *bhor-, *bhr-, which produced Latin forāre ‘bore’ (whence English foramen ‘small anatomical opening’), Greek phárynx, and prehistoric Germanic *borōn, from which we get bore (and German gets bohren). Bore connoting ‘tiresomeness’ suddenly appears on the scene as a sort of buzzword of the 1760s, from no known source; the explanation most commonly offered for its origin is that it is a figurative application of bore in the sense ‘pierce someone with ennui’, but that is not terribly convincing.In its early noun use it meant what we would now call a ‘fit of boredom’. There is one other, rather rare English word bore – meaning ‘tidal wave in an estuary or river’ [17]. It may have come from Old Norse bára ‘wave’.=> perforate, pharynx

bore (v.1)

Old English borian "to bore through, perforate," from bor "auger," from Proto-Germanic *buron (cognates: Old Norse bora, Swedish borra, Old High German boron, Middle Dutch boren, German bohren), from PIE root *bher- (2) "to cut with a sharp point, pierce, bore" (cognates: Greek pharao "I plow," Latin forare "to bore, pierce," Old Church Slavonic barjo "to strike, fight," Albanian brime "hole"). The meaning "diameter of a tube" is first recorded 1570s; hence figurative slang full bore (1936) "at maximum speed," from notion of unchoked carburetor on an engine. Sense of "be tiresome or dull" first attested 1768, a vogue word c. 1780-81 according to Grose (1785); possibly a figurative extension of "to move forward slowly and persistently," as a boring tool does.

bore (v.2)

past tense of bear (v.).

bore (n.)

thing which causes ennui or annoyance, 1778; of persons by 1812; from bore (v.1).

The secret of being a bore is to tell everything. [Voltaire, "Sept Discours en Vers sur l'Homme," 1738]