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词汇 jet
释义

jet1

nounPlural jets dʒɛtdʒɛt
  • 1A rapid stream of liquid or gas forced out of a small opening.

    喷射流

    a jet of boiling water spurted over his hand
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Through this a thin jet of liquid would flow into the mouth of the ritual drinker or brotherhood performer.
    • He opened his mouth wide and squirted a jet of water in.
    • State-of-the-art special effects include three-foot high fireballs, water jets and dancing fountains around the bamboo dance floor.
    • This can be difficult with large trees, but if you can hit the undersides with jets of water or insecticidal soap, you may lessen the problem.
    • The liquid jet as it strikes the solid surface can cause localized erosion and surface pitting.
    • The net effect is a liquid jet in the direction of the surface.
    • For this Friday Market in Kuwait, hot dry external air is humidified with jets of atomized water, and cooled to near wet bulb temperature.
    • Even in the height of summer, there are sprinklers going in everyone's garden and huge jets of water spraying crops throughout the day.
    • This process results in two jets of hadronic particles as the quarks form hadrons.
    • He lifted his hands and shot a jet of water towards one of the flaming walls.
    • Theo sent a jet of fire after him, but he turned and deflected it.
    • This fountain has 228 water jets, the highest reaching 15 metres.
    • Oni was sending jets of flames towards the soldiers, burning their dark iron armor.
    • A confined jet of compressed air pressurizes the inspiratory airflow.
    • Attached to the end of a wooden staff, they might shoot jets of flame at attackers.
    • Natural thermal springs abound and scores of tourist spots feature bubbling pools or jets of steam shooting from the ground.
    • According to dictionary definitions and everyday usage, a fountain is a jet of water that spurts up into the air.
    • From her hands burst jets of water that slowly put out the bird's fire.
    • A jagged crack shot through the ice and water gushed up in jets and spurts.
    Synonyms
    stream, spurt, squirt, spray, fountain, spout
    gush, outpouring, rush, surge, burst, spill, flow, flood, cascade, torrent, current
    1. 1.1 A nozzle or narrow opening for sending out a jet of liquid or gas.
      喷嘴,喷射口
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Imagine that a flow of liquid is proceeding in a smooth, regular fashion, but we can adjust a jet to make the flow run faster or slower.
      • If you've got your heart set on a whirlpool tub for your new master bathroom, do you want one with air jets or water jets, and what is the difference?
      • For all I know, the company may have toyed with the idea of slightly widening the nozzle on the windscreen-washer jets.
      • Positioned side by side, these hot tub jets provide gentle treatment to your shoulders and upper back.
      • A steam shower is a nice luxury feature similar to a shower, except jets emit steam instead of water.
      • Once that has been signed and returned, and the cost of new nozzles and jets paid, Egoli Gas will make the conversion.
      • Gases streaming through this jet hole cause the tube to rotate rapidly on its axis, so creating the humming sound.
      • Nozzles direct the spray droplets into the air jets.
      • Off the bathroom, steps lead to a raised Jacuzzi with 16 air jets and 8 water jets, all adjustable.
      • It could lead to improvements in devices that use liquid jets, as well as microjets that guide light.
      • The flow pattern caused by the tail flick of the 4 mm zebra danio larva is a vortex ring with a jet through the center.
      • The ejected material is channeled into narrow jets perpendicular to the disk, while material from the disk falls onto the protostar.
      • The wort is pumped from the kettle, and forced back into the kettle through a jet nozzle.
      Synonyms
      nozzle, head, spray, rose, atomizer, sprinkler, sprinkler head, spout, nose
      technical sparkler, spile
  • 2A jet engine.

    喷气发动机

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Stepping through the hole, he fires the suit's jump jets.
    • The jets contain relativistic winds that interact and collide, creating shock waves and emitting high-energy X-rays and gamma rays.
    • They finally quit, then several airplanes flew over, then a jet roared.
    1. 2.1 An aircraft powered by one or more jet engines.
      喷气式飞机
      a private jet

      私人喷气机。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • Gunboats patrolled the sea lanes and the skies were covered by fighter jets launched from an aircraft carrier in the Atlantic.
      • "Gulfstream still believes a supersonic business jet has good market potential, " he said.
      • She got on the small jet plane that only took 50 or so passengers.
      • He insisted on training to fly a jumbo jet despite an obvious lack of skill even with small planes.
      • The Indian Government has also chosen to buy 66 Hawk advanced jet trainer aircraft.
      • More and more privately owned jets are landing at Provincetown's small airport.
      • The six freed hostages boarded a Libyan chartered jet in Cebu yesterday on their way to Tripoli.
      • Think of the Internet revolution as a supersonic jet streaking through the sky.
      • Two company executives and three flight crew were killed when their private jet crashed shortly after take-off.
      • Maxine invites a woman she barely knows into Shadow Fox's private jet plane.
      • Flashes of memories came thundering back to me as jets roared in the clouds.
      • In 1986, hijackers seize a U.S. jumbo jet at Karachi's airport.
      • The carrier will use regional jets on the routes for the time being, The Post says.
      • How often have you ever heard of someone who qualified to fly fighter jets never flying a plane again?
      • I also heard what sounded like a muted jet aircraft engine.
      • The Texans left on a jet plane riding a Rocky Mountain high to Denver.
      • Alison and Rachel boarded the private jet at exactly 2 hours after the mission briefing.
      • In strictly military terms, a guided missile is little different from a kamikaze or a hijacked passenger jet.
      • The buildings were designed to withstand the force of even a bigger jumbo jet crashing.
      Synonyms
      jet plane, jetliner
      aircraft, plane
      British aeroplane
verbjets, jetted, jetting dʒɛtdʒɛt
  • 1no object, with adverbial of direction Spurt out in jets.

    喷射;喷出

    blood jetted from his nostrils

    血从他鼻孔中喷出。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • In several locations, rivers of mercury flowed from the planet's core, and occasional bursts of exploding methane jetted from the deeper craters.
    • Black blood jetted from the wound, and Narajao thrashed wildly.
    • The six giant grey cattle thundered along the embankment, their nostrils jetting steam in the cold air of a Hungarian autumn morning.
    • Agitations made her anger spew from her mouth like steam jetting from a teapot's flapping lid.
    • Robotic high pressure water jetting also greatly reduces the risks of injury to operations personnel.
    • Blood jetted from the cut, the young man fell down, dead.
    • Radiating from the effulgences, water jetted from the blue as fire spurted from the red.
    • Enemies struck by gunfire don't just fall over backwards; they jet blood like the lawn sprinkler in Hell, then collapse into a heap.
    Synonyms
    squirt, spurt, shoot, spray, fountain, erupt
    gush, pour, stream, rush, pump, surge, spew, spill, flow, course, well, spring, burst, issue, emanate
    British informal sloosh
  • 2no object, with adverbial of direction Travel by jet aircraft.

    乘喷气式飞机旅行

    the newly weds jetted off for a honeymoon in New York

    新婚夫妇乘喷气式飞机去纽约度蜜月。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The bride celebrated her birthday the day after the ceremony, as the newlyweds jetted out for their honeymoon in the Maldives.
    • The Boys on the Bus are jetting home this weekend on chartered or private aircraft.
    • The arguments have already been well rehearsed against the SPL teams jetting off to sunny climes.
    • Two years ago, Chambers was jetting around the globe preaching the gospel of the new economy to world leaders.
    • The Springboks jetted into East London Airport last night.
    • He jetted back to Ohio to attend the start of the Browns pre-season training.
    • The film, which gives young travellers safety tips before jetting off for adventures, is being made available to sixth-form colleges across the country.
    • For instance, no doubt you'll be jetting off on holiday anytime soon.
    • Much of this travel is businessmen and women jetting around the world to meetings.
    • While jetting around the world to meet foreign leaders, he has rarely ventured outside Kabul to meet local ones.
    • The IMF and the World Bank find him a ridiculous figure, jetting around the world while his people starve.
    • He jets to Bruce Springsteen concerts, has several luxury cars and collects fossils in prehistoric amber.
    • Travellers are being told that a little preparation now before jetting off can save a great deal of heartache later.
    • The newlyweds then jetted off to Costa Rica for an active honeymoon of hiking, diving and exploring the rain forest.
    • Over 40 members of Annascaul GAA jetted out to the sun on Saturday last.
    • It must be annoying for under-funded museum staff to see a travelling droid circus jetting in from California.
    • Representing AORN's members as President means jetting around the globe.
    • Another boondoggle for the rich to jet somewhere exotic to gush over their concern for the poor.
    • There's also the little matter of the Interim Government jetting about, all over the world… traveling from one place to the next.
    • Anne-Marie now has four weeks' leave and is jetting off on holiday with her husband.
    Synonyms
    fly, travel/go by jet, travel/go by plane, travel/go by air

Origin

Late 16th century (as a verb meaning 'jut out'): from French jeter 'to throw', based on Latin jactare, frequentative of jacere 'to throw'.

  • The name jet for a hard black semi-precious mineral comes ultimately from the Greek word gagatēs ‘from Gagai’, a town in Asia Minor. When we refer to a jet of water or gas, or a jet aircraft, we are using a quite different word. It comes from a late 16th-century verb meaning ‘to jut out’, from French jeter ‘to throw’, which goes back to the Latin jacere ‘to throw’. Jut (mid 16th century) is a variant of jet in this sense. Jacere is found in a large number of English words including abject (Late Middle English) literally ‘thrown away’; conjecture (Late Middle English) ‘throw together’; deject (Late Middle English) ‘thrown down’; ejaculate (late 16th century) from jaculum ‘dart, something thrown’; eject (Late Middle English) ‘throw out’; inject (late 16th century) ‘throw in’; jetty (Late Middle English) something thrown out into the water; project (Late Middle English) ‘throw forth’; subject (Middle English) ‘thrown under’; trajectory (late 17th century) ‘something thrown across’. Especially if you use budget airlines, air travel today is far from glamorous, but in the 1950s the idea of flying abroad by jet aircraft was new and sophisticated. At the start of that decade people who flew for pleasure came to be known as the jet set.

Rhymes

abet, aiguillette, anisette, Annette, Antoinette, arête, Arlette, ate, baguette, banquette, barbette, barrette, basinet, bassinet, beget, Bernadette, beset, bet, Bette, blanquette, Brett, briquette, brochette, brunette (US brunet), Burnett, cadet, caravanette, cassette, castanet, charette, cigarette (US cigaret), clarinet, Claudette, Colette, coquette, corvette, couchette, courgette, croquette, curette, curvet, Debrett, debt, dinette, diskette, duet, epaulette (US epaulet), flageolet, flannelette, forget, fret, galette, gazette, Georgette, get, godet, grisette, heavyset, Jeanette, kitchenette, La Fayette, landaulet, launderette, layette, lazaret, leatherette, let, Lett, lorgnette, luncheonette, lunette, Lynette, maisonette, majorette, maquette, Marie-Antoinette, marionette, Marquette, marquisette, martinet, met, minaret, minuet, moquette, motet, musette, Nanette, net, noisette, nonet, novelette, nymphet, octet, Odette, on-set, oubliette, Paulette, pet, Phuket, picquet, pillaret, pincette, pipette, piquet, pirouette, planchette, pochette, quartet, quickset, quintet, regret, ret, Rhett, roomette, rosette, roulette, satinette, septet, serviette, sestet, set, sett, sextet, silhouette, soubrette, spinet, spinneret, statuette, stet, stockinet, sublet, suffragette, Suzette, sweat, thickset, threat, Tibet, toilette, tret, underlet, upset, usherette, vedette, vet, vignette, vinaigrette, wagonette, wet, whet, winceyette, yet, Yvette

jet2

nounPlural jets dʒɛtdʒɛt
mass noun
  • 1A hard black semi-precious variety of lignite, capable of being carved and highly polished.

    煤玉,贝褐碳,黑色大理石

    as modifier jet beads
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Here, beads or pendants of jet or similar materials have been found beside beads of amber, faience, bone, wood, shell or stone.
    • Saba's eyes shone like stones of black jet as he greedily reached for the beer, downing it in one gulp.
    • It appeared, he noticed, almost like a shiny black, like jet, in the artificial orange glow.
    • He was a dark iron gray with a broad chest and fine quarters, clean limbed with perfect feet, and hoofs as black as jet.
    • Remarkably, the polished jet fastener must have been traded from Whitby in Yorkshire, more than 200 miles away.
    • Around the girl's neck was a gold choker set with glittering black jet, and on her head sat a gold crown.
    • A mouse runs up the side of a sack like a clockwork toy, then suddenly stops dead and watches me with his little eyes like tiny jet beads.
    • If it were cold, a jacket would be worn, decorated with jet beads, which could add as much as ten pounds to her clothing.
    1. 1.1 A glossy black colour.
      黑而发亮的,乌黑的
      as modifier her jet-black hair
      Example sentencesExamples
      • She was wearing a mauve suit, sharp black heels, and her jet black hair was tied in a bun.
      • Spiky jet black hair and shockingly bright blue eyes were only a few of his amazing traits.
      • She is beautiful beyond words, with her jet black hair and white, translucent skin.
      • Finland must be the only country on earth where natural corngold and silky white line up to dye their hair jet black.
      • That lustrous mane of jet-black hair is steel-grey now, and swept back from his brow.
      • The fairy was about four inches tall and had jet black hair with ice blue eyes and a shimmering white dress with pale blue accents.
      • He nodded, a full, thick head of jet black hair framing his face like a B-list Breugel.
      • He was about six foot nine with jet black hair and very disturbing black eyes.
      • The other was really, really tall, with long jet black hair and slanted black eyes.
      • Harry was small and skinny with brilliant green eyes and jet black hair that was always untidy.
      • Back then, her jet black hair fell to her waist, her panyol heritage obvious in her features.
      • He had sad neon-blue eyes, a black leather jacket, black boots and jet-black gloves.
      • Laura is pale and blonde; Marian has a darker complexion and jet-black hair.
      • A tall, slender girl with jet-black hair with tan skin and dark, dark brown eyes opened the door.
      • Behind it stood a tall, middle aged male in a jet black suit, jet black dress shirt and gray tie.
      • His short jet-black hair and black trench coat made him almost invisible against the background.
      • Cassandra has jet-black hair, shorter than Travis's and almost black eyes with light skin.
      • Spade's jet-black hair was worn into a bun and her black flight suit hugged her curves tightly.
      • He had jet-black messy hair and mysterious black eyes that were hidden behind his glasses.
      • One was dressed in black, with long, smooth black hair and equally jet black eyes.
      Synonyms
      black, jet-black, pitch-black, as black as pitch, pitchy, pitch-dark, inky, ink-black, sloe-black, coal-black, ebony, raven, sable, sooty

Origin

Middle English: from Old French jaiet, from Latin Gagates, from Greek gagatēs 'from Gagai', a town in Asia Minor.

JET3

abbreviation
  • Joint European Torus, a machine for conducting experiments in nuclear fusion, at Culham in Oxfordshire.

jet1

noundʒɛtjet
  • 1A rapid stream of liquid or gas forced out of a small opening.

    喷射流

    a high-pressure shower with pulsating jets
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Attached to the end of a wooden staff, they might shoot jets of flame at attackers.
    • This process results in two jets of hadronic particles as the quarks form hadrons.
    • Natural thermal springs abound and scores of tourist spots feature bubbling pools or jets of steam shooting from the ground.
    • From her hands burst jets of water that slowly put out the bird's fire.
    • He lifted his hands and shot a jet of water towards one of the flaming walls.
    • Even in the height of summer, there are sprinklers going in everyone's garden and huge jets of water spraying crops throughout the day.
    • Through this a thin jet of liquid would flow into the mouth of the ritual drinker or brotherhood performer.
    • For this Friday Market in Kuwait, hot dry external air is humidified with jets of atomized water, and cooled to near wet bulb temperature.
    • He opened his mouth wide and squirted a jet of water in.
    • The liquid jet as it strikes the solid surface can cause localized erosion and surface pitting.
    • A confined jet of compressed air pressurizes the inspiratory airflow.
    • This can be difficult with large trees, but if you can hit the undersides with jets of water or insecticidal soap, you may lessen the problem.
    • Theo sent a jet of fire after him, but he turned and deflected it.
    • According to dictionary definitions and everyday usage, a fountain is a jet of water that spurts up into the air.
    • This fountain has 228 water jets, the highest reaching 15 metres.
    • The net effect is a liquid jet in the direction of the surface.
    • State-of-the-art special effects include three-foot high fireballs, water jets and dancing fountains around the bamboo dance floor.
    • A jagged crack shot through the ice and water gushed up in jets and spurts.
    • Oni was sending jets of flames towards the soldiers, burning their dark iron armor.
    Synonyms
    stream, spurt, squirt, spray, fountain, spout
    1. 1.1 A nozzle or narrow opening for sending out a jet of liquid or gas.
      喷嘴,喷射口
      Agnes turned up the gas jet

      艾格尼丝转大了煤气喷嘴。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • The ejected material is channeled into narrow jets perpendicular to the disk, while material from the disk falls onto the protostar.
      • Gases streaming through this jet hole cause the tube to rotate rapidly on its axis, so creating the humming sound.
      • A steam shower is a nice luxury feature similar to a shower, except jets emit steam instead of water.
      • If you've got your heart set on a whirlpool tub for your new master bathroom, do you want one with air jets or water jets, and what is the difference?
      • Positioned side by side, these hot tub jets provide gentle treatment to your shoulders and upper back.
      • Off the bathroom, steps lead to a raised Jacuzzi with 16 air jets and 8 water jets, all adjustable.
      • For all I know, the company may have toyed with the idea of slightly widening the nozzle on the windscreen-washer jets.
      • It could lead to improvements in devices that use liquid jets, as well as microjets that guide light.
      • Nozzles direct the spray droplets into the air jets.
      • The wort is pumped from the kettle, and forced back into the kettle through a jet nozzle.
      • Imagine that a flow of liquid is proceeding in a smooth, regular fashion, but we can adjust a jet to make the flow run faster or slower.
      • Once that has been signed and returned, and the cost of new nozzles and jets paid, Egoli Gas will make the conversion.
      • The flow pattern caused by the tail flick of the 4 mm zebra danio larva is a vortex ring with a jet through the center.
      Synonyms
      nozzle, head, spray, rose, atomizer, sprinkler, sprinkler head, spout, nose
  • 2A jet engine.

    喷气发动机

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Stepping through the hole, he fires the suit's jump jets.
    • They finally quit, then several airplanes flew over, then a jet roared.
    • The jets contain relativistic winds that interact and collide, creating shock waves and emitting high-energy X-rays and gamma rays.
    1. 2.1 An aircraft powered by one or more jet engines.
      喷气式飞机
      a private jet

      私人喷气机。

      as modifier a jet plane
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The buildings were designed to withstand the force of even a bigger jumbo jet crashing.
      • The carrier will use regional jets on the routes for the time being, The Post says.
      • The Indian Government has also chosen to buy 66 Hawk advanced jet trainer aircraft.
      • Maxine invites a woman she barely knows into Shadow Fox's private jet plane.
      • She got on the small jet plane that only took 50 or so passengers.
      • Alison and Rachel boarded the private jet at exactly 2 hours after the mission briefing.
      • Flashes of memories came thundering back to me as jets roared in the clouds.
      • In strictly military terms, a guided missile is little different from a kamikaze or a hijacked passenger jet.
      • How often have you ever heard of someone who qualified to fly fighter jets never flying a plane again?
      • I also heard what sounded like a muted jet aircraft engine.
      • The six freed hostages boarded a Libyan chartered jet in Cebu yesterday on their way to Tripoli.
      • Two company executives and three flight crew were killed when their private jet crashed shortly after take-off.
      • More and more privately owned jets are landing at Provincetown's small airport.
      • In 1986, hijackers seize a U.S. jumbo jet at Karachi's airport.
      • The Texans left on a jet plane riding a Rocky Mountain high to Denver.
      • He insisted on training to fly a jumbo jet despite an obvious lack of skill even with small planes.
      • Think of the Internet revolution as a supersonic jet streaking through the sky.
      • Gunboats patrolled the sea lanes and the skies were covered by fighter jets launched from an aircraft carrier in the Atlantic.
      • "Gulfstream still believes a supersonic business jet has good market potential, " he said.
      Synonyms
      jet plane, jetliner
verbdʒɛtjet
[no object]
  • 1Travel by jet aircraft.

    乘喷气式飞机旅行

    the newlyweds jetted off for a honeymoon in New York

    新婚夫妇乘喷气式飞机去纽约度蜜月。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • While jetting around the world to meet foreign leaders, he has rarely ventured outside Kabul to meet local ones.
    • The arguments have already been well rehearsed against the SPL teams jetting off to sunny climes.
    • Two years ago, Chambers was jetting around the globe preaching the gospel of the new economy to world leaders.
    • He jetted back to Ohio to attend the start of the Browns pre-season training.
    • The Boys on the Bus are jetting home this weekend on chartered or private aircraft.
    • For instance, no doubt you'll be jetting off on holiday anytime soon.
    • Another boondoggle for the rich to jet somewhere exotic to gush over their concern for the poor.
    • Representing AORN's members as President means jetting around the globe.
    • The Springboks jetted into East London Airport last night.
    • The IMF and the World Bank find him a ridiculous figure, jetting around the world while his people starve.
    • Over 40 members of Annascaul GAA jetted out to the sun on Saturday last.
    • He jets to Bruce Springsteen concerts, has several luxury cars and collects fossils in prehistoric amber.
    • The newlyweds then jetted off to Costa Rica for an active honeymoon of hiking, diving and exploring the rain forest.
    • The film, which gives young travellers safety tips before jetting off for adventures, is being made available to sixth-form colleges across the country.
    • There's also the little matter of the Interim Government jetting about, all over the world… traveling from one place to the next.
    • Anne-Marie now has four weeks' leave and is jetting off on holiday with her husband.
    • Travellers are being told that a little preparation now before jetting off can save a great deal of heartache later.
    • Much of this travel is businessmen and women jetting around the world to meetings.
    • It must be annoying for under-funded museum staff to see a travelling droid circus jetting in from California.
    • The bride celebrated her birthday the day after the ceremony, as the newlyweds jetted out for their honeymoon in the Maldives.
    Synonyms
    fly, go by jet, travel by jet, go by plane, travel by plane, go by air, travel by air
  • 2Spurt out in jets.

    喷射;喷出

    blood jetted from his nostrils

    血从他鼻孔中喷出。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Agitations made her anger spew from her mouth like steam jetting from a teapot's flapping lid.
    • The six giant grey cattle thundered along the embankment, their nostrils jetting steam in the cold air of a Hungarian autumn morning.
    • Robotic high pressure water jetting also greatly reduces the risks of injury to operations personnel.
    • Blood jetted from the cut, the young man fell down, dead.
    • Enemies struck by gunfire don't just fall over backwards; they jet blood like the lawn sprinkler in Hell, then collapse into a heap.
    • Black blood jetted from the wound, and Narajao thrashed wildly.
    • In several locations, rivers of mercury flowed from the planet's core, and occasional bursts of exploding methane jetted from the deeper craters.
    • Radiating from the effulgences, water jetted from the blue as fire spurted from the red.
    Synonyms
    squirt, spurt, shoot, spray, fountain, erupt

Origin

Late 16th century (as a verb meaning ‘jut out’): from French jeter ‘to throw’, based on Latin jactare, frequentative of jacere ‘to throw’.

jet2

noundʒɛtjet
  • 1A hard black semiprecious variety of lignite, capable of being carved and highly polished.

    煤玉,贝褐碳,黑色大理石

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Remarkably, the polished jet fastener must have been traded from Whitby in Yorkshire, more than 200 miles away.
    • Here, beads or pendants of jet or similar materials have been found beside beads of amber, faience, bone, wood, shell or stone.
    • Around the girl's neck was a gold choker set with glittering black jet, and on her head sat a gold crown.
    • He was a dark iron gray with a broad chest and fine quarters, clean limbed with perfect feet, and hoofs as black as jet.
    • If it were cold, a jacket would be worn, decorated with jet beads, which could add as much as ten pounds to her clothing.
    • A mouse runs up the side of a sack like a clockwork toy, then suddenly stops dead and watches me with his little eyes like tiny jet beads.
    • It appeared, he noticed, almost like a shiny black, like jet, in the artificial orange glow.
    • Saba's eyes shone like stones of black jet as he greedily reached for the beer, downing it in one gulp.
    1. 1.1 A glossy black color.
      黑而发亮的,乌黑的
      as modifier the gloss of her jet hair

      她乌黑秀发的光泽。

      jet black

      乌黑。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • His short jet-black hair and black trench coat made him almost invisible against the background.
      • The other was really, really tall, with long jet black hair and slanted black eyes.
      • He had sad neon-blue eyes, a black leather jacket, black boots and jet-black gloves.
      • She was wearing a mauve suit, sharp black heels, and her jet black hair was tied in a bun.
      • Behind it stood a tall, middle aged male in a jet black suit, jet black dress shirt and gray tie.
      • That lustrous mane of jet-black hair is steel-grey now, and swept back from his brow.
      • He was about six foot nine with jet black hair and very disturbing black eyes.
      • A tall, slender girl with jet-black hair with tan skin and dark, dark brown eyes opened the door.
      • One was dressed in black, with long, smooth black hair and equally jet black eyes.
      • The fairy was about four inches tall and had jet black hair with ice blue eyes and a shimmering white dress with pale blue accents.
      • Cassandra has jet-black hair, shorter than Travis's and almost black eyes with light skin.
      • Harry was small and skinny with brilliant green eyes and jet black hair that was always untidy.
      • He nodded, a full, thick head of jet black hair framing his face like a B-list Breugel.
      • Finland must be the only country on earth where natural corngold and silky white line up to dye their hair jet black.
      • He had jet-black messy hair and mysterious black eyes that were hidden behind his glasses.
      • Back then, her jet black hair fell to her waist, her panyol heritage obvious in her features.
      • She is beautiful beyond words, with her jet black hair and white, translucent skin.
      • Spade's jet-black hair was worn into a bun and her black flight suit hugged her curves tightly.
      • Laura is pale and blonde; Marian has a darker complexion and jet-black hair.
      • Spiky jet black hair and shockingly bright blue eyes were only a few of his amazing traits.
      Synonyms
      black, jet-black, pitch-black, as black as pitch, pitchy, pitch-dark, inky, ink-black, sloe-black, coal-black, ebony, raven, sable, sooty

Origin

Middle English: from Old French jaiet, from Latin Gagates, from Greek gagatēs ‘from Gagai’, a town in Asia Minor.

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