英:[ˈventɪleɪtə(r)]
美:[ˈvɛntlˌetɚ]
英:[ˈventɪleɪtə(r)]
美:[ˈvɛntlˌetɚ]
n.
通风设备
通风机
气窗
负责通风的人
ven·ti·la·tor
ven t leI tr
复数:ventilators
词根:vent
adj.ventilated 通风的
ventilatory 通气的,通风的
n.vent (感情的)发泄;出口;通风孔
ventilation 通风设备;空气流通
v.ventilated 发表;使…通风(ventilate的过去分词)
vi.vent 放出;(通过排泄等)减轻压力
vt.vent 发泄感情;放出…;给…开孔
ventilate 使通风;给…装通风设备;宣布
noun
something or someone that ventilates: such as
a device for introducing fresh air or expelling foul or stagnant air
a device for maintaining artificial respirationespecially: a mechanized device that enables the delivery or movement of air and oxygen into the lungs of a patient whose breathing has ceased, is failing, or is inadequate : mechanical ventilator Note: Modern, computerized mechanical ventilators typically monitor and customize gas delivery, maintain a constant pressure in the lungs to prevent the alveoli from collapsing, and deliver air and oxygen to the lungs by way of an endotracheal tube.
1743年,代词派生词,源自 ventilate。拉丁语 ventilator 的意思是“一个扬谷者”。
呼吸器,通风机:一种设计用于提供适宜空气以资吸入或以间歇或持续方式辅助或控制肺换气的装置
通风筒
通气机
通风器
ventilate + -or >entry 1 (perhaps after Latin ventilātor "winnower")
The first known use of ventilator was in 1743
venture1 of 2verb
to expose to risk
ventured a dollar on the lottery
to face the risks and dangers of
ventured the stormy sea
to offer at the risk of being criticized venture to disagree
venture an opinion
to go ahead in spite of danger
ventured down the cliff
venture2 of 2noun
an undertaking involving chance, risk, or dangerespecially: a speculative business enterprise
venture1 of 2verb
to expose to risk
ventured a dollar on the lottery
to face the risks and dangers of
ventured the stormy sea
to offer at the risk of being criticized venture to disagree
venture an opinion
to go ahead in spite of danger
ventured down the cliff
venture2 of 2noun
an undertaking involving chance, risk, or dangerespecially: a speculative business enterprise
venture1 of 2verb
to expose to risk
ventured a dollar on the lottery
to face the risks and dangers of
ventured the stormy sea
to offer at the risk of being criticized venture to disagree
venture an opinion
to go ahead in spite of danger
ventured down the cliff
venture2 of 2noun
an undertaking involving chance, risk, or dangerespecially: a speculative business enterprise
venture1 of 2verb
to expose to risk
ventured a dollar on the lottery
to face the risks and dangers of
ventured the stormy sea
to offer at the risk of being criticized venture to disagree
venture an opinion
to go ahead in spite of danger
ventured down the cliff
venture2 of 2noun
an undertaking involving chance, risk, or dangerespecially: a speculative business enterprise
vent1 of 3verb
to provide with an outlet
to serve as an outlet for
chimneys vent smoke
to give expression to
vented her frustration on her sister
vent2 of 3noun
an opening (as a flue) for the escape of a gas or liquid or for the relief of pressure
an opportunity or means of release : outlet
his writing gives vent to his pent-up feelings
vent3 of 3noun
an opening in the lower part of a seam (as of a jacket or skirt)
ventriloquistnoun
a person skilled in speaking in such a way that the voice seems to come from a source other than the speaker
ventriclenoun
a chamber of the heart which receives blood from an atrium and from which blood is forced into the arteries
one of the cavities in the brain that are continuous with the central canal of the spinal cord
ventraladjective
of or relating to the belly : abdominal
being or located on or near the surface of the body that in human beings is the front but in most other animals is the lower surface
a fish's ventral fins
vent1 of 3verb
to provide with an outlet
to serve as an outlet for
chimneys vent smoke
to give expression to
vented her frustration on her sister
vent2 of 3noun
an opening (as a flue) for the escape of a gas or liquid or for the relief of pressure
an opportunity or means of release : outlet
his writing gives vent to his pent-up feelings
vent3 of 3noun
an opening in the lower part of a seam (as of a jacket or skirt)
ventilatornoun
a device for letting in fresh air or driving out bad or stale air
respirator sense 2
ventilatornoun
a device for maintaining artificial respirationespecially: a mechanized device that enables the delivery or movement of air and oxygen into the lungs of a patient whose breathing has ceased, is failing, or is inadequate : mechanical ventilator Note: Modern, computerized mechanical ventilators typically monitor and customize gas delivery, maintain a constant pressure in the lungs to prevent the alveoli from collapsing, and deliver air and oxygen to the lungs by way of an endotracheal tube.
1 The injury left him a quadriplegic, his body inert; a ventilator inflated and deflated his lungs so that he could breathe.
2 He suffered a fractured skull and severe haemorrhaging and spent five days on a ventilator in a medically induced coma.
3 And there is a large surplus of ventilators sitting unused.
4 News that she has been off the ventilator but there had been no dramatic signs of improvement in recent weeks.
5 Johnson is also breathing independently after using a ventilator for several weeks.
詹森也正在使用一个通风机作为好几个星期之后独立地呼吸.
6 Once the ventilator shaft became blocked, the warehouse quickly filled with fumes.
通风管一旦堵塞, 仓库很快就充满了烟雾.
7 As hurricane winds were heeling the vessel past its downflooding angle so that the sea poured in through those same rotting ventilators, the captain had no way to determine wind velocity.
8 Paralyzed from the neck down, he’s unable to breathe without a ventilator.
9 In other words , ventilator autotriggering may occur under any condition, whenever the triggering criteria are met.
换言之,在任何情况下只要符合驱动的条件, 呼吸器即会给气.
10 This placed his eyes on a level with the ventilator, so he could see another train about ten yards away.
11 He also believes he's getting messages from God through his son, who's on a ventilator.
12 I followed behind the Strauss contingent up to the second floor as they tried to discover where the ventilator led to.
13 “Push them through the ventilator over the door.”
14 Human beings in there were excreting into steel helmets which were passed to the people at the ventilators, who dumped them.
15 We know there’s someone alive inside, breathing with a ventilator; the image is terrible in its suffocating solitude.
16 Anaesthesia machine, Ventilator, Patient monitor, ECG, B Ultrasound scanner, and Clinical laboratory equipment.
X光机,麻醉机, 呼吸机, 监护仪, 心电图, B超扫描仪, 临床实验室设备.
17 She said he’d been on dialysis and was on a ventilator for nine days but they waited until after Christmas to take him off it.
18 The room has too few windows. A ventilator must be installed.
这间屋子的窗户太少,必须得安个换气扇。
19 Drugs and radiation, chemotherapy, ventilators, feeding tubes, medical drips and monitors — all these may be worth enduring when a reasonable hope exists for a return to the world outside the intensive care unit.
20 According to People, Odom can now breathe without a ventilator but is still unable to walk and, despite his “miraculous turnaround,” is “still very weak.”