英:['mɔ:təbɔ:d]
美:['mɔtəˌboʊrd]
英:['mɔ:təbɔ:d]
美:['mɔtəˌboʊrd]
mor·tar·board
mor tr bord
也称 mortar-board,1823年,指石匠用于搅拌灰泥的方形板,由 mortar(n.1)和 board(n.1)组成。1854年开始用于指代学位帽,可能因其形似石匠的板而得名。早期称为 mortar cap(1680年代)或简称 morter(约1600年),源自法语 mortier。
The first known use of mortarboard was in 1761
mortgageenoun
a person to whom property is mortgaged
mortgage1 of 2noun
a transfer of rights to a piece of property (as a house) usually in return for a loan and that is canceled when the loan is paid
the document recording such a transfer
mortgage2 of 2verb
to transfer rights to a piece of property by a mortgage
to place under an obligation : pledge in advance
mortar1 of 2noun
a strong deep bowl in which substances are pounded or crushed with a pestle
a short muzzle-loading cannon used to fire shells at a low speed and at high angles
mortar2 of 2noun
a building material made of lime and cement mixed with sand and water that is spread between bricks or stones so as to hold them together when it hardens
mortar1 of 2noun
a strong deep bowl in which substances are pounded or crushed with a pestle
a short muzzle-loading cannon used to fire shells at a low speed and at high angles
mortar2 of 2noun
a building material made of lime and cement mixed with sand and water that is spread between bricks or stones so as to hold them together when it hardens
mortar1 of 2noun
a strong deep bowl in which substances are pounded or crushed with a pestle
a short muzzle-loading cannon used to fire shells at a low speed and at high angles
mortar2 of 2noun
a building material made of lime and cement mixed with sand and water that is spread between bricks or stones so as to hold them together when it hardens
mortarboardnoun
a board used to hold mortar while it is being applied
an academic cap with a broad flat square top and tassel that is worn at graduation and other ceremonies
1 Whether you’re one day or fifty years past graduation, all of us can benefit from the wisdom of those who tossed their mortarboards before us.
2 The ceremony took place quickly as Ebony Miller walked to a table in Indiana University Northwest’s Anderson Library and flipped a blue tassel on a black mortarboard.
3 We tossed our masks in the air in place of mortarboards.
4 At eighteen, Belky wears a blue gown and mortarboard for her high school graduation.
5 The district said it has previously allowed students to decorate their mortarboards, noting that a student at Thursday’s ceremony had the Mexican flag on her cap, which was permitted.
6 Students at the U.K.’s University of East Anglia have been told to mime throwing their mortarboards upon graduation this July, due to the “unacceptable risk” the flying caps may pose on the students’ safety.
7 Keep your carnation buttonhole and your mortarboard, I thought.
8 He motioned for me to wear my mortarboard, and took a picture of me with the school’s clock tower in the background.
9 “My family was poor,” she said in the voice-over that accompanied an image of her and three girlfriends beaming in purple mortarboards.
10 The other honorees, including the commencement speaker, Darren Walker, the president of the Ford Foundation, will have mortarboards.
11 Some show young people "lying flat" in graduation gowns, faces covered with mortarboards; others show them holding their graduation certificates above dustbins, ready to bin them.
12 For her graduation in 2020, she decorated her mortarboard with flower and butterfly cutouts and the words, “For The Lives That I Will Change.”
13 It was not until a year after Mrs. Clinton’s classmates tossed their mortarboards that Laura Richards first tossed her tam in “The Mary Tyler Moore Show.”
14 When graduation time arrived, she purchased a cart full of supplies from a craft store and invited her friends over to decorate mortarboards with their names and bright colors.
15 But thanks to advances in image-editing technology, grads in the United Kingdom can still bag the photo without risking a mortarboard to the eye.
16 Under my mortarboard, under my tassel, suddenly rich, I was the top-ranked boy.
17 There are no beaming graduates holding their diplomas proudly or throwing their mortarboards into the air.
18 “I may have taken off my mortarboard and put on whatever hat a diplomat wears, but I’m doing the same thing,” Lipstadt said.
19 That summer of 1983, I graduated from high school at the age of twenty, by far the oldest senior tossing his mortarboard on the football field that day.
20 The letter included a 2019 letter from then-Attorney General Mike Hunter that an Indigenous student’s right to wear eagle feathers on their mortarboard is protected under the Oklahoma Religious Freedom Act.