英:[ˈsi:feərɪŋ]
美:[ˈsiferɪŋ]
英:[ˈsi:feərɪŋ]
美:[ˈsiferɪŋ]
sea·far·ing
si feI ring
词根:seafarer
n.seafarer 船员;航海家
Noun
1. the work of a sailor
2. travel by water
Adjective
1. used on the high seas;
"seafaring vessels"
也称为 sea-faring,意为“习惯在海上旅行,经常出海”,起源于公元1200年的 safarinde,由 sea 和 faring(参见 fare(v.))组成。
The first known use of seafaring was in 1592
sealskinnoun
the fur or pelt of a fur seal
a garment (as a coat) of sealskin
seal1 of 4noun
any of numerous marine mammals that live mostly in cold regions, feed especially on fish, mate and give birth to young on land, and use short webbed flippers to swim and dive
the soft dense fur of a seal
leather made from the skin of a seal
seal2 of 4verb
to hunt seals
seal3 of 4noun
something (as a pledge) that makes safe or secure
under seal of secrecy
a device with a cut or raised design or figure that can be pressed or stamped into paper or wax to form a mark (as for certifying a signature)
a usually ornamental adhesive stamp that may be used to close a letter or package
Christmas seals
something that is attached to a closed container and has to be broken in order to open the container
a tight and perfect closing
test the seal of the jars
seal4 of 4verb
to mark with a seal
seal a deed
to close with or as if with a seal ice sealed the ships into the harbor
the sheriff sealed the area
to decide finally
sealer1 of 2noun
an official who certifies weights and measures
a substance used on a surface to be painted that prevents the paint from sinking in
sealer2 of 2noun
a person or a ship engaged in hunting seals
seal1 of 4noun
any of numerous marine mammals that live mostly in cold regions, feed especially on fish, mate and give birth to young on land, and use short webbed flippers to swim and dive
the soft dense fur of a seal
leather made from the skin of a seal
seal2 of 4verb
to hunt seals
seal3 of 4noun
something (as a pledge) that makes safe or secure
under seal of secrecy
a device with a cut or raised design or figure that can be pressed or stamped into paper or wax to form a mark (as for certifying a signature)
a usually ornamental adhesive stamp that may be used to close a letter or package
Christmas seals
something that is attached to a closed container and has to be broken in order to open the container
a tight and perfect closing
test the seal of the jars
seal4 of 4verb
to mark with a seal
seal a deed
to close with or as if with a seal ice sealed the ships into the harbor
the sheriff sealed the area
to decide finally
sea horsenoun
a mythical animal half horse and half fish
a small fish with bony plates covering its body and a head that looks like a horse's head
sea gullnoun
a gull that lives near the sea
seagoingadjective
designed or used for sea travel
seafoodnoun
edible marine fish and shellfish
seafloornoun
seabed
seafaringnoun
a traveling over the sea as work or recreation
1 “Many of the next generation of the Casement family took to seafaring,” the website said, “while the fate of another member of the family, Sir Roger Casement, is well known.”
2 I couldn't understand why no one had ever set a seafaring novel there before.
3 It is a complex, soulful sound, mixing an array of influences arising from the African and seafaring traditions of the 10 volcanic islands.
4 “Nowhere,” the latest addition to the seafaring survivalist tradition, won’t be remembered for long.
5 A team of scientists from four countries have set out on a seafaring expedition to discover what color the Atlantic Ocean is.
目前,一只四国科学家小组已经开始远洋航行,去研究大西洋到底是什么颜色。
6 That form of male vanity is by no means absent from the seafaring tribe today.
这种形式的强烈虚荣心在现代化航海为业的民族中也决能免除.
7 It’s an amazing novel that I just revisited about Marstal, a small town in Denmark — a seafaring town, a fisherman’s town — and the riders of freight ships from this town.
8 His venue of choice is the Galley, the 80-year-old Santa Monica bar and grill known for its exuberant seafaring theme of fishnets and pufferfish lighting fixtures.
9 And no seafaring men of Phaiakia perceived Odysseus passing through their town: the awesome one in pigtails barred their sight with folds of sacred mist.
10 A nice haul of swag — yet Pirates! was outdone by another seafaring tale, Titanic.
11 The interior décor continues the seafaring theme: Tables are finished with boat paint and lights covered in reclaimed local sailcloth.
12 And it summed up a collection that was as fresh as its seafaring theme.
13 Upon entering the exhibit, visitors encounter a 15-foot seafaring canoe and the similarly impressive, jovial 19th-century "Door Guardian" from New Caledonia.
14 Reason: Easter Island's silent stone figures are a monument to the seafaring skills and unique culture of ancient Polynesian peoples.
理由:复活节岛的沉默的巨石像是航海技术和古代波利尼西亚人的独特文化的纪念碑。
15 These device-free evenings connected us with a seafaring tradition — long monologues.
16 Its rocky coves, secret anchorages and long winding creeks have historically been a haunting ground for seafaring scoundrels and salty sea dogs.
17 Their shipbuilding and seafaring expertise took them not just across northern Europe but halfway around the globe.
18 The dialect includes archaic "thees" and "thous," a wealth of seafaring vocabulary, and an aspirate "h" either added or subtracted to everyday words.
19 For her research Ms. Rogan read several nonfiction accounts of seafaring.
20 By the time a seafaring rainbow returns home, the ocean has transmuted it into an altogether different fish — a longer, broader, salmonlike creature with silver sides known as a steelhead.