英:[bɑ:k]
美:[bɑrk]
英:[bɑ:k]
美:[bɑrk]
a small sailing ship
a sailing ship of three or more masts with the aftmost mast fore-and-aft rigged and the others square-rigged
a craft propelled by sails or oars
“bark(n.2)”的变体。
三桅帆船
Middle English : from Old French, probably from Provençal barca, from late Latin barca 'ship's boat'
barrel1 of 2noun
a round bulging container that is longer than it is wide and has flat ends
the amount held by a barrel
a great quantity
a barrel of laughs
a part shaped like a cylinder or tube the barrel of a carburetor
gun barrel
barrel2 of 2verb
to travel at a high speed
barreling down the highway
barrel1 of 2noun
a round bulging container that is longer than it is wide and has flat ends
the amount held by a barrel
a great quantity
a barrel of laughs
a part shaped like a cylinder or tube the barrel of a carburetor
gun barrel
barrel2 of 2verb
to travel at a high speed
barreling down the highway
barrel1 of 2noun
a round bulging container that is longer than it is wide and has flat ends
the amount held by a barrel
a great quantity
a barrel of laughs
a part shaped like a cylinder or tube the barrel of a carburetor
gun barrel
barrel2 of 2verb
to travel at a high speed
barreling down the highway
barredadjective
having alternate bands of different color
barragenoun
a barrier formed by continuous artillery or machine-gun fire directed upon a narrow strip of ground
a rapid or furiously active flow (as of speech or writing)
barracudanoun
any of several large fierce marine fishes of warm seas that have strong jaws and sharp teeth and that include some used for food
bar1 of 4noun
a straight piece (as of metal or wood) that is longer than it is wide
a usually rectangular piece or block of material
a bar of soap
something that hinders or blocks : obstacle
a bank (as of sand) partly or entirely under water along a shore or in a river
the railing in a courtroom around the place where the business of the court is carried on
a court of law
the profession of law
stripe entry 3 sense 1
a counter on which alcoholic drinks or food is served
barroom
a vertical line across the musical staff before the beginning of a measure
measure entry 1 sense 4c
standard entry 1 sense 2a
raise the bar for improving new medicines
bar2 of 4verb
to fasten with a bar
bar the door
to mark with bars : stripe
gray feathers barred with brown
to block off : close
bar the road with a chain
to keep out : exclude
bar reporters from a meeting
prevent sense 1, forbid
the judge barred them from talking to reporters
bar3 of 4preposition
with the exception of
bar none
bar4 of 4noun
a unit of pressure equal to 100,000 pascals
barque
1 There stood the ever faithful Margaret, with palpitating heart, watching the light barque, as it came bounding over the small curling waves of the Orwell.
2 An iron wreck found on 19 December 2015 was most likely the barque West Ridge, which vanished while sailing from England to India with 28 sailors in 1883, the report said.
3 A Newfoundland barque that had followed us in had to do likewise.
4 Now on my barque—ah, no! no barque be mine!
5 And traffic is everywhere: Ships, fishing boats, and barques ply the waters, their sails swollen by gusts of wind and their decks loaded with goods.
6 The Portuguese Navy’s sail training barque Sagres is also visiting this weekend after an extended stay in New Bedford last week.
7 The German barque Hera, which hit rocks off the Roseland 100 years ago, was 90 days into a voyage from Chile.
8 Nevertheless, I always knew that the Lord is in the barque, that the barque of the church is not mine, not ours, but his - and he shall not let her sink.
9 A foreign barque was wrecked on the Ship-wash, a sandbank eight miles from land, the nearest port being Harwich, from which its southern end is distant ten miles.
10 The waves are rolling along in all their fury, and beat down upon the sands with tremendous force, and among them, and settled down somewhat, is a large barque.
11 She was a Dantzig barque, the "Hoffnung," bound for Quebec, her only passengers being a Moravian minister and his wife, on their way to join a small German colony established near Lake Champlain.
12 League topgallant jury mast sutler barque reef grog.
13 Away at sea two vessels were in sight—one a full-rigged ship, not far from the island; the other a barque, just breaking the horizon, with her white sails gleaming in the sunshine.
14 Faced with mounting financial difficulties, the museum considered dispensing with the four-masted barque, which was built in Hamburg, Germany, in 1911.
15 Sloops and cutters, brigs and barques, flagged with silks of red and blue and green.
16 It was almost full dark, but the moon-god Thoth’s heavenly barque, which revealed its high-prowed boat shape clearly these nights of its waning, was beginning to shed a gentle radiance over the littered pavement.
17 Divers can explore the wreck of the Zephyr, a wooden barque that sunk just offshore in 1872.
18 What I have to do is to see to it that my little barque rides on the top of them in the most perfect security and peace.
19 I had seen the movie “Mr. Turner,” with its shipwrecked frozen barques and shocking skies, and here was a frozen ruined urban seascape laid out beneath our view.
20 Providence assists them, for at daybreak they sight a French barque.