climb

[klaɪm] [klaɪm]
  • 第三人称单数:climbs;
  • 过去式:climbed;
  • 过去分词:climbed;
  • 现在分词:climbing;
  • 例句
    同义词
    同义词解析
    • 以下这些动词均含有"攀登,上升" 的意思
      ascend :正式用词,指不用手攀,一直上升直到相当高的地方。
      climb :普通用词,含义广泛,侧重运用手足费力地攀登或上升,也可指抽象事物。
      mount :书面用词,词义与ascend相近,强调连续不断地向上移动、攀登或上涨。指骑马时用mount。
    • 以下这些动词都有"爬" 的意思
      creep多指人或四足动物匍匐爬行,尤指偷偷地或不出声地缓慢向前爬行。也指植物的蔓延生长等。
      climb通常指用手或足爬上或爬下,也指飞机、日、月的上升,还可用作比喻。
      crawl指人或动物以身躯贴着地面缓慢地移动。
    词组
    • be climbing the walls
      (informal)feel frustrated, helpless, and trapped (非正式)感到无能为力
    • have a mountain to climb
      be facing a very difficult task 面临挑战
    • climb down
      withdraw from a position taken up in argument or negotiation (争执、谈判中)退让,让步,屈服
    英语四级真题
    • The snake has been named silver boa because it is metal-coloured and the first specimen found was climbing a silver palm tree.
      出自-2017年6月听力原文
    • The more recent steep climb in grain prices partly results from the fact that more and more people want to consume meat products.
      出自-2016年6月阅读原文
    • Indeed, even before the steep climb in grain prices in 2008, the number of failing states was expanding.
      出自-2016年6月阅读原文
    • I spent my boyhood climbing trees on Streatham Common, South London.
      出自-2010年12月阅读原文
    • Instead, topping the list of reasons, about four-in-ten Americans point to a double standard for women seeking to climb to the highest levels of either politics or business, where they have to do more than their male counterparts to prove themselves.
      2019年6月四级真题(第二套)阅读 Section C
    英语六级真题
    • Their number climbs to about 40 in the warmer summer months.
      出自-2016年12月阅读原文
    • have placed religious beliefs above party politicshave bridged the gap between the rich and the pooroffer poor children more chances to climb the social laddersuffer from higher levels of racial and economic segregationFamily structure.
      出自-2015年12月阅读原文
    • They can climb the social ladder even without a degree.
      出自-2015年12月阅读原文
    • A number of prominent economists have also argued that it's harder for the poor to climb the economic ladder today because the rungs(横档) in that ladder have grown farther apart.
      出自-2015年12月阅读原文
    • US gross domestic product has climbed back to pre-recession levels, meaning we're producing as much as before, only with 6% fewer workers.
      出自-2012年12月阅读原文
    • In the book, we meet John Muir as a youth fearlessly climbing the roof of his house.
      出自-2013年6月听力原文
    • If you climb to 10000 feet, stay at that height for a day or two.
      出自-2012年12月听力原文
    • You body needs to get used to a high altitude before you climb to an even higher one
      出自-2012年12月听力原文
    • Or if you do climb higher sooner, come back down to a lower height when you sleep.
      出自-2012年12月听力原文
    • Mountain climbing is becoming popular sport, but it is also a potentially dangerous one.
      出自-2012年12月听力原文
    • At heights of over 18000 feet, people may be climbing in a constant daze(恍惚)
      出自-2012年12月听力原文
    • A number of prominent economists have also argued that it's harder for the poor to climb the economic ladder today because the rungs (横档) in that ladder have grown farther apart.
      2015年12月六级真题(第三套)阅读 Section C
    • It reflected the fact that these decades saw a climb in general standards of living and avoidance of mass societal traumas like foil-scale war or economic deprivation.
      2019年12月六级真题(第一套)阅读 Section B
    • Twenge's team's analysis of the answers confirmed the earlier, well-established well-being climb, with scores rising across the 1990s, and into the later 2000s.
      2019年12月六级真题(第一套)阅读 Section B
    柯林斯高阶英汉双解学习词典释义
    英汉词典释义
    英英词典释义
    • Noun
      1. an upward slope or grade (as in a road);
      "the car couldn't make it up the rise"
      2. an event that involves rising to a higher point (as in altitude or temperature or intensity etc.)
      3. the act of climbing something;
      "it was a difficult climb to the top"
    • Verb
      1. go upward with gradual or continuous progress;
      "Did you ever climb up the hill behind your house?"
      2. move with difficulty, by grasping
      3. go up or advance;
      "Sales were climbing after prices were lowered"
      4. slope upward;
      "The path climbed all the way to the top of the hill"
      5. improve one's social status;
      "This young man knows how to climb the social ladder"
      6. increase in value or to a higher point;
      "prices climbed steeply""the value of our house rose sharply last year"
    行业词典
    • 航空: 爬升;在飞行中,当发动机推力大于空气阻力,利用剩余的那部分推力做功,使航空器增加高度的飞行。;