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词汇 messenger
释义

Definition of messenger in English:

messenger

noun ˈmɛsɪn(d)ʒəˈmɛs(ə)ndʒər
  • 1A person who carries a message or is employed to carry messages.

    信使;报信者;信差;通信员

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Margaret joined West Middlesex Hospital at the tender age of 15, employed as a messenger on just £2.50 for a 43-hour week.
    • Manto is only a messenger, she is carrying out duties laid out by government.
    • Perhaps by then city staff will have reported on what they think the impact of this could be on the city economy - although finding a messenger to deliver the message may be difficult.
    • Indeed, what will decide this election in the next three weeks is whether Americans are voting on the message or the messenger.
    • It was generally a servant's task to take messages from the messengers.
    • He was employed as a foot messenger, so he was on the subway frequently and took advantage of it, doing motion tags.
    • Changing perceptions requires powerful combinations of messages, messengers and media.
    • If no traders could be found, special messengers had to be employed for the task.
    • Eve's action was based on the hearing of an evil message from an evil messenger.
    • But the really amazing thing is that so many others in the free world not only do not agree but loathe and detest this message and its messengers.
    • Negotiations about the precise wording of the speech are intense, with messages and messengers traversing the strait on a near-daily basis.
    • Notwithstanding the authority of the messenger, the message deserves examination on its own terms.
    • After he was demobbed in 1946 the couple, who have no children, lived in London, where Ron was employed as a messenger by a national newspaper.
    • In Ancient Egypt, the Pharaoh's messengers and diplomatic envoys carried with them the seal of the Pharaoh, production of which guaranteed the carrier free and unhindered passage throughout the region.
    • Agni was the next and was important in the sacrifices and was considered as a messenger, carrying the messages to the heavens, as the flames of the sacrificial fires ascended upwards.
    • Unable to disprove an unpalatable message, the messenger has been shot.
    • All members can be alerted to urgent messages by messengers or via the party whips.
    • They had a very hierarchical structure but operated with extremely slow communications, such as notes carried by messengers and face-to-face meetings.
    • Some of us just refuse to react, blaming the messengers for their message and accusing the scientists of scaremongering.
    • They had spent a great deal of time copying the letters that would be carried by messengers to the various leaders of the Elders around the world.
    Synonyms
    message-bearer, message-carrier, postman, courier, errand boy/girl, runner, dispatch rider, envoy, emissary, agent, go-between, legate, nuncio, herald, harbinger
    1. 1.1Biochemistry A substance that conveys information or a stimulus within the body.
      〔生化〕(体内传递信息和刺激的)信使
      nitric oxide is an intercellular messenger
      Example sentencesExamples
      • It translates genetic information from messenger ribonucleic acid and makes protein accordingly.
      • The afternoon slump, when eyelids droop and shoulders sag, is the result of a complicated dance of the body's chemical messengers.
      • ‘Some plasticizers can mimic the effects of certain hormones - they're chemical messengers in the body,’ she says.
      • As the body's chemical messengers, hormones transfer information and instructions from one set of cells to another.
      • RNA is the messenger molecule that takes information from DNA and uses it to make proteins.
verb ˈmɛsɪn(d)ʒəˈmɛs(ə)ndʒər
[with object]
  • Send (a document or package) by messenger.

    〈主美〉(用信使)送(文件,包裹)

    could you have it messengered over to me?

    请您派人给我送过来,好吗?

    Example sentencesExamples
    • But Jandd's massive Gabriel messenger bag is closer to the size most hard-working street urchins on wheels actually use for messengering, and it's definitely up to the task.
    • One day I received by messenger a dirty and smudged envelope with no return address.
    • Would you like us to have it messengered to you or would you come in and pick it up yourself?
    • But I think, as circumstance would have it, she was anticipating, I think, a script to be messengered, and there was a buzz at her door.
    • He swore that my parents would be messengered a letter saying I had been accepted to an exclusive school.
    • Arnaz phones the night club, has Stack paged and asks him to go home and read some scripts that are being messengered to his doorstep.
    • If that's the case, Perle can messenger or e-mail the transcripts to me, and I'll get them posted on the Web overnight.
    • Knowing I was ill she messengered me over some echinacea and zinc and ginger tea.
    • This speech does not report the movement of the betrothal message, from kingly words recounted, to messenger, to scroll, to herald's voice.

Phrases

  • shoot (or kill) the messenger

    • Treat the bearer of bad news as if they were to blame for it.

      将怨气发在报坏消息者身上

      I was only reporting—no point in shooting the messenger
      Example sentencesExamples
      • When people don't believe bad news, or don't want to believe it can affect them, the tendency is to shoot the messenger.
      • There is no time to be wasted by shooting the messenger of bad news.
      • The truth hurts, but that's no excuse for trying to shoot the messenger.
      • Calling them names for doing so is like shooting the messenger who brings bad news.
      • The British public can't allow the Labour Party to shoot the messenger of such important news.
      • It was much like a potentate of yore shooting the messenger carrying bad news.
      • It is indeed a sorry state of affairs when Irish politicians resort to shooting the messenger when election results are not to their liking.
      • If only such people could focus their energies on the real issues in society, rather than insisting on shooting the messenger.
      • We know that many people have an unfortunate tendency to kill the messenger who bears bad news, and sometimes it is necessary to take this tendency into account.
      • If it were not for the Press, this situation could have continued indefinitely - so please don't shoot the messenger.

Origin

Middle English: from Old Northern French messanger, variant of Old French messager, from Latin missus (see message).

Definition of messenger in US English:

messenger

nounˈmes(ə)njərˈmɛs(ə)ndʒər
  • 1A person who carries a message or is employed to carry messages.

    信使;报信者;信差;通信员

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Margaret joined West Middlesex Hospital at the tender age of 15, employed as a messenger on just £2.50 for a 43-hour week.
    • Manto is only a messenger, she is carrying out duties laid out by government.
    • They had spent a great deal of time copying the letters that would be carried by messengers to the various leaders of the Elders around the world.
    • Unable to disprove an unpalatable message, the messenger has been shot.
    • Changing perceptions requires powerful combinations of messages, messengers and media.
    • They had a very hierarchical structure but operated with extremely slow communications, such as notes carried by messengers and face-to-face meetings.
    • Some of us just refuse to react, blaming the messengers for their message and accusing the scientists of scaremongering.
    • Indeed, what will decide this election in the next three weeks is whether Americans are voting on the message or the messenger.
    • It was generally a servant's task to take messages from the messengers.
    • Perhaps by then city staff will have reported on what they think the impact of this could be on the city economy - although finding a messenger to deliver the message may be difficult.
    • Negotiations about the precise wording of the speech are intense, with messages and messengers traversing the strait on a near-daily basis.
    • But the really amazing thing is that so many others in the free world not only do not agree but loathe and detest this message and its messengers.
    • In Ancient Egypt, the Pharaoh's messengers and diplomatic envoys carried with them the seal of the Pharaoh, production of which guaranteed the carrier free and unhindered passage throughout the region.
    • Agni was the next and was important in the sacrifices and was considered as a messenger, carrying the messages to the heavens, as the flames of the sacrificial fires ascended upwards.
    • If no traders could be found, special messengers had to be employed for the task.
    • After he was demobbed in 1946 the couple, who have no children, lived in London, where Ron was employed as a messenger by a national newspaper.
    • He was employed as a foot messenger, so he was on the subway frequently and took advantage of it, doing motion tags.
    • All members can be alerted to urgent messages by messengers or via the party whips.
    • Eve's action was based on the hearing of an evil message from an evil messenger.
    • Notwithstanding the authority of the messenger, the message deserves examination on its own terms.
    Synonyms
    message-bearer, message-carrier, postman, courier, errand boy, errand girl, runner, dispatch rider, envoy, emissary, agent, go-between, legate, nuncio, herald, harbinger
    1. 1.1Biochemistry A substance that conveys information or a stimulus within the body.
      〔生化〕(体内传递信息和刺激的)信使
      nitric oxide is an intercellular messenger
      Example sentencesExamples
      • RNA is the messenger molecule that takes information from DNA and uses it to make proteins.
      • The afternoon slump, when eyelids droop and shoulders sag, is the result of a complicated dance of the body's chemical messengers.
      • ‘Some plasticizers can mimic the effects of certain hormones - they're chemical messengers in the body,’ she says.
      • As the body's chemical messengers, hormones transfer information and instructions from one set of cells to another.
      • It translates genetic information from messenger ribonucleic acid and makes protein accordingly.
verbˈmes(ə)njərˈmɛs(ə)ndʒər
[with object]
  • Send (a document or package) by messenger.

    〈主美〉(用信使)送(文件,包裹)

    could you have it messengered over to me?

    请您派人给我送过来,好吗?

    Example sentencesExamples
    • He swore that my parents would be messengered a letter saying I had been accepted to an exclusive school.
    • Arnaz phones the night club, has Stack paged and asks him to go home and read some scripts that are being messengered to his doorstep.
    • Would you like us to have it messengered to you or would you come in and pick it up yourself?
    • But Jandd's massive Gabriel messenger bag is closer to the size most hard-working street urchins on wheels actually use for messengering, and it's definitely up to the task.
    • If that's the case, Perle can messenger or e-mail the transcripts to me, and I'll get them posted on the Web overnight.
    • Knowing I was ill she messengered me over some echinacea and zinc and ginger tea.
    • But I think, as circumstance would have it, she was anticipating, I think, a script to be messengered, and there was a buzz at her door.
    • One day I received by messenger a dirty and smudged envelope with no return address.
    • This speech does not report the movement of the betrothal message, from kingly words recounted, to messenger, to scroll, to herald's voice.

Phrases

  • shoot (or kill) the messenger

    • Treat the bearer of bad news as if they were to blame for it.

      将怨气发在报坏消息者身上

      Example sentencesExamples
      • When people don't believe bad news, or don't want to believe it can affect them, the tendency is to shoot the messenger.
      • If it were not for the Press, this situation could have continued indefinitely - so please don't shoot the messenger.
      • If only such people could focus their energies on the real issues in society, rather than insisting on shooting the messenger.
      • There is no time to be wasted by shooting the messenger of bad news.
      • Calling them names for doing so is like shooting the messenger who brings bad news.
      • The truth hurts, but that's no excuse for trying to shoot the messenger.
      • The British public can't allow the Labour Party to shoot the messenger of such important news.
      • It is indeed a sorry state of affairs when Irish politicians resort to shooting the messenger when election results are not to their liking.
      • It was much like a potentate of yore shooting the messenger carrying bad news.
      • We know that many people have an unfortunate tendency to kill the messenger who bears bad news, and sometimes it is necessary to take this tendency into account.

Origin

Middle English: from Old Northern French messanger, variant of Old French messager, from Latin missus (see message).

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