colleague如何读

英:[ˈkɒliːɡ]

美:[ˈkɑːliːɡ]

colleague英汉释义

n.(名词)
  1. [C]同事,同僚 person with whom one works, especially in a profession or business

colleague是什么意思

n. (名词)
  1. 同事,同僚,同行
  2. 同伴,同仁
  3. 辅助设备
  4. 生意上的熟人
v. (动词)
  1. 联合
  2. 加盟
  3. 阴谋策划

colleague自然拼读

col·league

ka lig

colleague变形

复数:colleagues

colleague英英释义

Noun

1. an associate you work with

2. a person who is member of your class or profession;

"the surgeon consulted his colleagues"

"he sent e-mail to his fellow hackers"

colleague区别

 client, colleague, co-worker, employee

client客户

colleague同事

co-worker同事

employee雇员

以上来源于网络

 comrade, companion, colleague, partner, fellow, associate

这组词都有“同事,伙伴”的意思,其区别是:

comrade指具有共同的事业、利益关系相一致的人。

companion指陪伴他人的人,即同伴或陪伴。

colleague一般用于对同事的正式称呼,基本上专用在职业关系上。

partner指事业中处于合伙关系的人,或指婚姻、游戏、跳舞中的另一方。

fellow多用复数形式,指一块住、生活或同行共事的人。

associate普通用词,侧重指在利害关系上密切相关。

以上来源于网络

colleague词源中文解释

“同事,雇员或劳动合伙人”,1530年代,来自法语“collègue”(16世纪),源自拉丁语“collega”,意为“办公室合伙人”,由“com”(见 com-)的同化形式和“leg-”组成,“legare”是“作为代表发送,带命令发送”的词干,源于 PIE 语系的“*leg-”(1),“收集,聚集”。因此,“与另一个人一起工作的人被派遣或选择”,或“与另一个人同时被选择”。

colleague_体育行业词汇

同伴

colleague词源英文解释

Middle French collegue, from Latin collega, from com- + legare to depute — more at legate

The first known use of colleague was circa 1533

colleague儿童词典英英释义

command1 of 2verb

to issue orders by right of authority

to have authority and control over : be commander of

command an army

to have for one's use

commands many resources

to demand or receive as one's due : exact

commands a high fee

to look down on especially from a militarily strong position

the hill commands the town

command2 of 2noun

the act of commanding

march on command

an order given

obey a command

the ability to control : mastery

a good command of French

the authority, right, or power to command

the people, area, or unit under a commander

a position from which military operations are directed

comfort1 of 2verb

to give strength and hope to : cheer

to ease the grief or trouble of : console

comfort2 of 2noun

acts or words that comfort

the feeling of the one that is comforted

find comfort in a mother's love

something that makes a person comfortable

the comforts of home

comeverb

to move toward or journey to something : approach come see us

come here

to arrive at or enter a scene of action

the police came to our rescue

to reach the point of being or becoming

the rope came untied

to add up : amount

the bill came to $10

to take place

the holiday came on Thursday

originate sense 2, arise

honey comes from bees

to be available

the dress comes in three colors

extend sense 4, reach

a coat that comes to the knees

to arrive at a place, end, result, or conclusion we now come to the next chapter

came to their senses

happen sense 5

no harm will come to you

to fall within the range or limits of something

comes under the terms of the treaty

to turn out to be : become

her dreams have come true

comeverb

to move toward or journey to something : approach come see us

come here

to arrive at or enter a scene of action

the police came to our rescue

to reach the point of being or becoming

the rope came untied

to add up : amount

the bill came to $10

to take place

the holiday came on Thursday

originate sense 2, arise

honey comes from bees

to be available

the dress comes in three colors

extend sense 4, reach

a coat that comes to the knees

to arrive at a place, end, result, or conclusion we now come to the next chapter

came to their senses

happen sense 5

no harm will come to you

to fall within the range or limits of something

comes under the terms of the treaty

to turn out to be : become

her dreams have come true

combine1 of 2verb

to bring into close relationship : unify

to mix together so that the identity of each part is lost

combine the ingredients of a recipe

to become one

to unite to form a chemical compound

combine2 of 2noun

a union of persons or groups especially for business or political benefits

a machine that harvests, threshes, and cleans grain while moving over a field

colour

colossaladjective

of, relating to, or resembling a colossusespecially: of very great size

a colossal office building

extraordinary, exceptional a colossal failure

colossal growth

color1 of 2noun

an aspect of light (as red, brown, or gray) or sight that allows one to tell otherwise identical objects apart from each other

the color of blood is red

the property of objects and light sources that may be described in terms of hue, lightness, and chromatic purity for objects and hue, brightness, and chromatic purity for light sources

the sky's changing color

a particular combination of hue, lightness or brightness, and chromatic purity

the car comes in six colors

a color other than black, white, or gray

an outward and often deceiving appearance

her story has the color of truth

skin pigmentation other than and especially darker than what is considered characteristic of people typically defined as white does not discriminate on the basis of color

a person of color

the tint in a person's face indicating good health or an emotion (as embarrassment)

the use or combination of colors

a painter who is a master of color

an identifying flag, badge, or pennant

a ship sailing under Swedish colors

armed forces

a call to the colors

a person's nature or character

showed his true colors during the crisis

vitality sense 3b, interest entry 1 sense 4b

her comments added color to the broadcast

something used to give color : pigment

color2 of 2verb

to give color to

the wind colored our cheeks

to change the color of (as by dyeing, staining, or painting)

misrepresent, distort

his story is colored by his prejudices

to take on or change colorespecially: blush

collect1 of 3noun

an opening prayer in the Communion service or the Mass

collect2 of 3verb

to bring or come together into one body or place

to gather from a number of sources

collect stamps

to gain or regain control of

collecting my thoughts

to demand and take payment for

collect a bill

to form in a heap or mass : accumulate

junk collecting in the attic

collect3 of 3adverb or adjective

to be paid for by the receiver call collect

a collect phone call

colleaguenoun

an associate in a profession or office

colleague 例句

1 It may take time but one candidate surely will emerge as the best colleague and researcher.

这可能花费时间,但这样做可能会招到最好的同事和研究人员.

2 Like that time we went to a party thrown by a colleague of Tom’s, and I was very drunk, but we’d had a good night.

3 Although some of his closest colleagues realized the value of his quick, penetrating mind and frequently sought his advice, he was often not appreciated, and most people thought he talked too much.

4 Mullen and his colleagues then called up people in a number of cities around the country who regularly watch the evening network news and asked them who they voted for.

5 While a handful of his colleagues embraced his cure, most of Philadelphia’s doctors condemned his methods and dubbed Rush the “Prince of Bleeders.”

6 We were friends and colleagues for more than 20 years.

20多年来我们既是朋友又是同事。

7 “My father's a surgeon. He got a position at the same hospital as Dr. Mansfield. They're colleagues.”

8 My colleagues even jokingly accused me of not wanting to miss a meal.

9 If I preached unity, I must act like a unifier, even at the risk of perhaps alienating some of my own colleagues.

10 But then another round of battles began that would last another five years—because the orchestra refused to pay her on par with her male colleagues.

11 Cockcroft was thirty-four, a man with the mild eccentricities that American physicists had come to expect in their cross-oceanic colleagues.

12 We will try to understand his choices by looking carefully at what is known about him and his world—his birthplace, his adoptive homes in Athens and Alexandria, his predecessors, colleagues, and enemies.

13 A colleague urged him to see a psychiatrist, but Faulkner refused.

一位同事竭力劝福克纳去看精神病医生,但他拒绝了。

14 Although I was to discover a core of sympathetic whites who became friends and later colleagues, most of the whites at Wits were not liberal or color-blind.

15 As a result, they were making startling discoveries that only underscored the constraints faced by their American colleagues.

16 To hear the girls from the other dormitories tell it, Miss Lucy’s diligence put her colleagues to shame.

17 “We’ll have the campus all to ourselves. I hope you don’t mind, but I’ve asked a few of my colleagues to join us as we test your IQ.”

18 At one point Stirling and a colleague hitched a ride in a pepper truck to one of the smaller sites.

19 Rush was forty-seven years old and so highly respected that he was often called in by colleagues when they were baffled by a case.

20 Displays of temper were almost unheard of; no utterances of profanity are recorded in the extensive recollections of his students and colleagues.

colleague 同义词

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