英:[ˈwɪnə(r)]
美:[ˈwɪnər]
英:[ˈwɪnə(r)]
美:[ˈwɪnər]
win·ner
wI nr
复数:winners
词根:win
adj.winning 胜利的;获胜的
winless 未赢的;从来没胜过的
n.win 赢;胜利
winning 胜利;获得;成功
v.winning 获胜(win的ing形式)
vi.win 赢;获胜;成功
vt.win 赢得;在…中获胜;劝诱
noun
one that wins: such as
one that is successful especially through praiseworthy ability and hard work
a victor especially in games and sports
one that wins admiration
a shot in a court game that is not returned and that scores for the player making it
这组词都有“胜利者”的意思,其区别是:
winner普通用词,通常指比赛或竞赛中的优胜者,也指经过努力的成功者。
conqueror指靠武力征服对方的胜利者。
以上来源于网络
14世纪中期, win(v.)的代理名词。形容词 winner-take-all 的使用始于1901年。
得分球
第一名
优胜者
有赢利的公司
The first known use of winner was in the 14th century
winnowverb
to remove by a current of air the parts separated from grain in threshing
to expose grain to a current of air to remove waste
to sort or separate as if by winnowing
winnowed the guest list down to 20
winnowverb
to remove by a current of air the parts separated from grain in threshing
to expose grain to a current of air to remove waste
to sort or separate as if by winnowing
winnowed the guest list down to 20
winning1 of 2noun
the act of one that wins : victory
something wonespecially: money won in a game or contest —usually used in plural
winning2 of 2adjective
of, relating to, or used for or in the act of winning
the winning ticket
successful especially in competition
a winning team
tending to please or delight
a winning personality
winning1 of 2noun
the act of one that wins : victory
something wonespecially: money won in a game or contest —usually used in plural
winning2 of 2adjective
of, relating to, or used for or in the act of winning
the winning ticket
successful especially in competition
a winning team
tending to please or delight
a winning personality
winning1 of 2noun
the act of one that wins : victory
something wonespecially: money won in a game or contest —usually used in plural
winning2 of 2adjective
of, relating to, or used for or in the act of winning
the winning ticket
successful especially in competition
a winning team
tending to please or delight
a winning personality
winnernoun
one that wins
winnernoun
one that wins
1 They had worked hard to eradicate customs that had begun to corrupt their society, banning even seemingly benign diversions such as a gaming machine, a simple gambling device that spit out candy to its winners.
2 Then Walter Fried, the president of the American Chess Foundation, who’d just burst into the room, noticed that Fischer was in absentia and declared Reshevsky the winner of the series.
3 The one that shot out the furthest was the winner.
4 The game was a framework in which there was a winner and a loser.
5 Taylor adjusted the bandolier so that it fell perfectly across her chest like a winners sash.
6 That we, the Gang of Five, could actually be winners.
7 Only former winners are invited to participate as members of the planning committee.
8 The winner of that final set of quiz questions will be declared our local elementary-school-level champion and will proceed to the nationals in Washington.
9 But don’t they understand that the winner has already been determined?
10 The winner will be announced at the rally.
11 She was sure that this story was a winner.
12 I tap my CharlieCard and pass through the turnstile like a marathon winner, hands raised.
13 The pharmacist always made Doctor Copeland sole judge of the papers and the winner was announced at the Christmas party.
14 “I did not see that coming. Unfortunately, sporting events have champions and clear winners. After next Monday, you may no longer be in the lead for the Excelsior.”
15 “The gala will happen in orbit. It is a fancy affair. And that night we’ll announce the all-American teen spawn artist winner.”
16 “The winners will be announced just before Thanksgiving,” Mrs. Grayson told them all.
17 She thanked everyone for attending and then read off the winners of the silent auctions.
18 Once you were a winner, you had to stay the winner they expected you to be.
19 Coming forward as winners from World War II, a modern America began to emerge.
20 For almost forty years Bragg, a Nobel Prize winner and one of the founders of crystallography, had been watching X-ray diffraction methods solve structures of ever-increasing difficulty.*