英:[bɑ:k ʌp ðə rɔŋ tri:]
美:[bɑrk ʌp ði rɔŋ tri]
英:[bɑ:k ʌp ðə rɔŋ tri:]
美:[bɑrk ʌp ði rɔŋ tri]
把某事物搞错了;捕风捉影;
verb (1)
intransitive verb
to make the characteristic short loud cry of a dog
to make a noise resembling a bark
to speak in a curt loud and usually angry tone : snap
informal to produce a usually sharp, sudden pain The shoulder is pain-free for now, but his elbow barks at him occasionally …—Mike Lupica
… at 36 and with his mustache turning gray and his body barking back in pain, Luis DeLeon is in spring training with the Cubs.—Joseph A. Reaves
transitive verb
to utter in a curt loud usually angry tone
an officer barking orders
to advertise by persistent outcry
barking their wares
noun (1)
the sound made by a barking dog
a similar sound
a short sharp peremptory tone of speech or utterance
noun (2)
the tough exterior covering of a woody root or stemspecifically: the tissues outside the cambium that include an inner layer especially of secondary phloem and an outer layer of periderm
cinchona sense 2
a candy containing chocolate and nuts that is made in a sheet and broken into pieces
verb (2)
transitive verb
to treat with an infusion of tanbark
to strip the bark from
to rub off or abrade the skin of
barked a shin on the desk
noun (3)
a small sailing ship
a sailing ship of three or more masts with the aftmost mast fore-and-aft rigged and the others square-rigged
a craft propelled by sails or oars
Verb (1) Middle English berken, from Old English beorcan; akin to Old Norse berkja to bark, Lithuanian burgėti to growl Noun (2) Middle English, from Old Norse bark-, bǫrkr; akin to Middle Dutch & Middle Low German borke bark Noun (3) Middle English, from Middle French barque, from Old Occitan barca, from Late Latin
The first known use of bark was before the 12th century
rhythmnoun
a flow of rising and falling sounds in language that is produced in verse by a regular repeating of stressed and unstressed syllables
a flow of sound in music having regular accented beats
a particular or typical pattern of rhythm
a movement or activity in which some action repeats regularly
the rhythm of breathing
bark1 of 5verb
to make the short loud cry of a dog or a similar noise
to shout or speak sharply
bark out an order
bark2 of 5noun
the sound made by a barking dog
bark3 of 5noun
the tough covering of a woody root or stem
bark4 of 5verb
to strip the bark from
to rub or scrape the skin of
barked her knee
bark5 of 5noun
a small sailing ship
a three-masted ship with the first two masts square-rigged and the last fore-and-aft rigged
1 the new supervisor found that speaking to people with a civil tongue got better results than barking at them
2 barking a tree will probably kill it
3 took a small bark out on the lake
4 Just days before that, a moose in Colorado charged and trampled a hiker whose dog started barking at the animal while walking along a trail.
5 Don't forget crepe myrtles also drop seeds, pods, and bark too.
6 He had been wrong about the wolf.
他一直错怪了这匹狼。
7 She thought I'd made the report to the police,but she was barking up the wrong tree.
她认为我已报了警,然而她错怪了人。
8 Mr. A may bark up the wrong tree if he thinks he can fool her.
如果A先生认为可以愚弄她的话,那他就认错人了.
9 Mr. Smith may bark up the wrong tree if he thinks he can fool her.
如果史密斯先生认为可以愚弄她的话,那他就认错人了.