例句
词组
  • in (或 at) one fell swoop
    all in one go 一举,一下子
  • at one fell swoop 或 in one fell swoop
    All at once. 一下子,即刻
英语四级真题
  • Industrial production fell by 12.8% in the year to March, the worst slide since the Second World War.
    出自-2013年6月阅读原文
  • Median (中位数的) pay for chief executives of S&P 500 companies fell
    出自-2013年6月阅读原文
  • But there was some pain for everyone: median pay for chief executives of non-financial firms in the S&P 500 fell by 2.7%.
    出自-2013年6月阅读原文
  • Worst of all, when her son, Ned, fell and injured his knee, she refused to pay for a doctor and spent hours looking for free medical help.
    出自-2014年6月听力原文
  • After it fell asleep they loaded the cow into a horse trailer.
    2019年12月四级真题(第一套)听力 Section A
  • For instance, talking about mathematical geniuses who were more or less born that way puts students in a fixed mindset, but descriptions of great mathematicians who fell in love with math and developed amazing skills produce a growth mind-set.
    2016年12月四级真题(第二套)阅读 Section B
  • I fell in love with it instantly and continued with ballet dancing for about ten years.
    2019年6月四级真题(第二套)听力 Section C
  • In fact it was a potato pancake, and it fell on the stovetop, not on the floor.
    2018年12月四级真题(第三套)阅读 Section B
  • In the last year alone, despite an increase in the UK population and a subsequent rise in the number of households, sales of toilet paper fell by 2%, with the average household reducing their toilet roll spending from £43 in 2014 to £41 in 2015.
    2017年6月四级真题(第三套)阅读 Section C
  • Irene and Frederic soon fell in love and got married on October 29, 1926.
    2017年12月四级真题(第一套)听力 Section C
  • similarly with earnings, young men's wages after adjusting for inflatio have been on a downward trajectory since 1970 and fell significantly from 2000 to 2010.
    2019年6月四级真题(第二套)阅读 Section B
  • So he lay down and fell asleep, but the tide swept in quickly at the beach.
    2019年12月四级真题(第二套)听力 Section A
  • Some began to stop taking bathroom breaks, worried that if their productivity fell they would be fired.
    2016年12月四级真题(第三套)阅读 Section B
  • When the container was tipped over, sometimes an object fell out and sometimes it didn't.
    2018年12月四级真题(第三套)阅读 Section C
英语六级真题
  • True, stock prices fell a third from September to December 1929, but fewer Americans then owned stocks.
    出自-2013年6月阅读原文
  • Everything fell into a place", she recalls.
    出自-2013年12月听力原文
  • He fell in love with Natasha Willough by
    出自-2013年12月听力原文
  • In addition, thousands of fragments that fell off the walls have been recovered.
    2019年6月六级真题(第二套)听力 Section B
  • In an email sent Monday to college presidents in the Tennessee Board of Regents system, outgoing Chancellor John Morgan said an internal analysis showed that each campus' spending on facilities management fell well below the industry standards identified
    2017年6月六级真题(第二套)阅读 Section C
  • In the Pew survey, middle-class families earning between $30,000 and $75,000 a year fell right between working-class and high-earning parents on issues like the quality of their neighborhood for raising children, participation in extracurricular activitie
    2017年6月六级真题(第二套)阅读 Section B
  • Spending fell by 10% in the first half of the year.
    2016年6月六级真题(第三套)阅读 Section C
  • When cocaine eventually fell from grace as a beverage ingredient, kola-extract colas became popular.
    2017年12月六级真题(第一套)阅读 Section C
  • When tim Joseph started his business, he found grass-fed products fell short of demand.
    2019年12月六级真题(第三套)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. the dressed skin of an animal (especially a large animal)
    2. seam made by turning under or folding together and stitching the seamed materials to avoid rough edges
    3. the act of felling something (as a tree)
  • Verb
    1. cause to fall by or as if by delivering a blow;
    "strike down a tree""Lightning struck down the hikers"
    2. pass away rapidly;
    "Time flies like an arrow""Time fleeing beneath him"
    3. sew a seam by folding the edges
  • Adjective
    1. (of persons or their actions) able or disposed to inflict pain or suffering;
    "a barbarous crime""brutal beatings""cruel tortures""Stalin's roughshod treatment of the kulaks""a savage slap""vicious kicks"