英:[kɑːdz]
美:[kɑːrdz]
英:[kɑːdz]
美:[kɑːrdz]
noun (1)
playing card
a game played with cards
card playing
something (such as an advantage) compared to a valuable playing card in one's hand
holding all the cards in negotiations
an issue especially with emotional appeal that is brought into play to achieve a desired end (such as winning a political campaign)
played the race card
greeting card
a birthday card
a flat stiff usually small and rectangular piece of material (such as paper, cardboard, or plastic) usually bearing information: such as
programespecially: a sports program
three fights on the card
a wine list
informal + old-fashioned a usually clownishly amusing person : wag
He's such a card!
compass card
verb (1)
transitive verb
to ask for identification (as in a bar)
We all got carded.
score
a golfer carding a 75
to place or fasten on or by means of a card
to provide with a card
to list or record on a card
verb (2)
transitive verb
to cleanse, disentangle, and collect together (fibers) by the use of cards preparatory to spinning
noun (2)
an instrument or machine for carding fibers that consists usually of bent wire teeth set closely in rows in a thick piece of leather fastened to a back
an implement for raising a nap on cloth
abbreviation
cardinal
on the cardsadv. 可能
play cards打扑克
house of cards不切实际无法实现的计划;筹划不周难以成功的计划
deck of cardsn. 一幅牌,扑克牌
in the cardsadj. 似乎会发生的
valentine cards情人节卡片
tarot cards塔罗牌(预卜命运的一种牌)
"一种用纸牌玩的游戏",15世纪中期,来自 card (n.1)的复数形式。
纸牌
Noun (1) Middle English carde, from Anglo-French, alteration of Middle French carte, probably from Old Italian carta, literally, leaf of paper, from Latin charta leaf of papyrus, from Greek chartēs Noun (2) Middle English carde, from Medieval Latin cardus, carduus, thistle, carding instrument, from Latin carduus thistle — more at chard
The first known use of card was in the 14th century
carelessadjective
free from care : not troubled
not taking proper care
a careless worker
done, made, or said without proper care
a careless mistake
carefuladjective
using care : watchful
a careful driver
made, done, or said with care
a careful examination
carefuladjective
using care : watchful
a careful driver
made, done, or said with care
a careful examination
carefuladjective
using care : watchful
a careful driver
made, done, or said with care
a careful examination
carefreeadjective
free from care: as
lighthearted
irresponsible sense 2
carefree with money
careenverb
to cause a boat to lean or tilt over on one side for cleaning or repairing
to sway from side to side
career entry 2
careenverb
to cause a boat to lean or tilt over on one side for cleaning or repairing
to sway from side to side
career entry 2
card1 of 4verb
to clean and untangle fibers by combing with a card before spinning
card2 of 4noun
an instrument usually having bent wire teeth for combing fibers (as wool or cotton)
card3 of 4noun
playing card
a game played with cards
card playing
informal an amusing person : wag—used especially in the past
a flat stiff usually small and rectangular piece of paper, thin cardboard, or plastic: as
postcard
such a card on which computer information is stored
credit card
greeting card
a sports program
a removable circuit board (as in a personal computer)
card4 of 4verb
to provide with a card
to ask for identification
1 Sometimes the cards and the dice and the questions just didn’t go your way.
2 He went on to tell us about how he stole cash from birthday cards.
3 “Do you prefer reading to cards?” said he; “that is rather singular.”
4 I hand a few cards to Lee Lee.
5 “Kevin...the Happy Birthday songs, the Valentine cards, all the nice things she does for people...doesn’t that count for something?”
6 "We need to see your identification cards," says the patrol leader.
7 With the help of his teacher, Stephen’s whole class had secretly worked much of the previous school day making the index cards.
8 He and Papa smoke their pipes and stay up late playing cards.
9 “How you make the cards fan out like that and float.”
10 The yellow light of the room stands next to me as I happily look down at the stories of those cards.
11 That was in the first days when Mack and the boys sat on the floor, played cards hunkered down, and slept on the hard boards.
12 The men at the table looked up from their cards and laughed.
13 The usher sent the card in to Brown along with the cards of everyone else in the reception room.
14 “Do you want to play cards?” he asked.
15 Darrell Ebbing, in the textbook General Chemistry, very usefully suggests thinking of a deck of cards.
16 Eventually she tossed the cards on the table and said, “Fill them out or don’t. But if you don’t, no one will.”
17 “Check out the sections for numbers the cards wouldn’t give us.”
18 We both kneeled down to pick up the cards.
19 When the old guys — the guys that had been through it before — saw him, they put their cards down, and their magazines, and gathered around him.
20 At home I line Jason’s blank cards on my desk, ready to draw.
1 纸牌游戏