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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
  • 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 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
  • 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
  • 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
  • Someone who remains calm during panic or disaster
    I'm looking for a word that describes someone that remains calm when others panic, specifically in a calamity or accident Example 1: Someone that is in an auto accident and they remain level-headed
  • Aged vs. Aging to describe someones age
    I'm just wondering if we can also use the word aging when describing someone's age as in this example: The study included participants aging 20 to 50
  • 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





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