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词汇 barge
释义

Definition of barge in English:

barge

noun bɑːdʒbɑrdʒ
  • 1A long flat-bottomed boat for carrying freight on canals and rivers, either under its own power or towed by another.

    (运河或河流中自行或被拖曳的)大型平底货船,驳船

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Transport now includes harbour ferries, and ferries or barges on rivers or lakes.
    • During slack water, tugs tow freight barges and rafts of logs through the narrows with scant room to manoeuvre.
    • He spent his childhood on canal barges until he became a farmhand at the age of 12.
    • The community council was waiting upon written confirmation from Waterways Ireland that they could extend the operating area of the barge from the canal to the Barrow.
    • After checking into their hotel when they arrive, they can stroll up to where the many canal barges are moored.
    • Pupils were treated to a trip to Athy, where they visited the Heritage Centre and had a trip in a barge along the canal.
    • The barge carrying the linkspans arrived from Poland early on Tuesday morning.
    • At night, its surface always glittered with the lanterns of passing trade ships and river barges.
    • Up at the top of 274 steps, Dordrecht and its bridges, rivers and ponderous barges lay open for admiration.
    • Farmers throughout the Midwest and southern states ship their produce on barges down the Mississippi River to New Orleans, where they are loaded onto ocean-going vessels.
    • Although built in 1953 she reflects the design of horse drawn barges used when the canal first opened more than 200 years ago.
    • The lift was originally used to carry barges of salt, coal and clay.
    • Over on the river, flat-bottomed barges being loaded with cargo and refugees headed off down the river.
    • His father owns mills in the country and a lot of the barges on the canal and the Thames.
    • Now, the barge will ply the canal again, as it once did in the 1940s.
    • The Saram was riddled with shallows and waterfalls above Derm, but from that point south river barges could ferry them down the lower Saram, Morvan, and Bellwater to the Bay of Kolvania.
    • In Bordeaux, barges must carry chunks of the fuselage up the Garonne River under an 18 th-century bridge that offers scant clearance.
    • The United States is a very attractive market, easy to access by ocean-going vessels and river barges.
    • We hear the chants of the trackers as they pull the barge on the canal.
    • When the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers lets water out of Georgia's West Point Lake to bring barges up the Chattahoochee River, it pulls the plug on recreational boating, too.
    Synonyms
    lighter, canal boat, flatboat
    British narrowboat, wherry
    North American scow
    1. 1.1 A long ornamental boat used for pleasure or ceremony.
      (游玩或典礼中用的)华丽大游艇,画舫
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The Museum of Richmond is hosting a talk on royal barges and other boats as part of its Tudor by the Thames activities week.
      • Minister O'Donoghue also spoke of the town as a popular boating centre and a base for the pleasure barges on the Barrow.
      • Until very recently, the casino had to be an actual boat, not a barge, even if it never left the dock, making for cramped conditions.
      • There rode ships from France, England, Holland, China and Japan, while innumerable boats and gilded barges rowed by sixty men plied to and fro.
      • Each year, thousands of tourist flock to Robertstown to enjoy the natural amenities in the area, with most visitors taking in a trip on the barge along the Grand Canal.
      • One of the most moving and unforgettable moments for all who witnessed that sad and highly emotive day of his funeral was to watch the barge carrying him down the mighty River Thames.
      • Boats carry people from one place to another, farmers and fishermen bring their produce to the city to sell, and every year the king of Thailand holds important ceremonies on the water in his royal barge.
      • This shows the aged and ailing Richelieu slumped against cushions in his barge, towing the boat in which the young and healthy conspirators are being taken to their place of execution.
      • Many involved smaller boats, such as tugs, barges and fishing boats, in the Malacca Straits and Indonesian waters.
      • Surrounded by a lake in the centre of Bandar Seri Begawan, the ceremonial barge remains unused.
      • Starting at the Palais Rohan, where Napoleon dumped Josephine, long glass-roofed bateaux mouches, or river barges, follow a lazy route through the Ill canals.
      • A second gong sounds and the curtains fall off the barge that is being towed behind the boat.
      • He said this week he wants to build a marina there with up to 300 boat slips and install a barge with a bandstand.
      • He purchased the business in 1995 with his wife, Barbara, and rents out canal barges to holidaymakers.
      • But like this horse-riding character, Eggers is not on a pleasure barge.
      • One of Calderdale's most colourful characters got the send-off he wanted when a barge carrying his coffin ferried him to his final resting place.
    2. 1.2 A boat used by the chief officers of a warship.
      (旗舰将官的)专用艇
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The last anyone heard of him he was an oarsman on an officer's barge.
      • We came over in the barge to the Hall with his Excellency, the ladies and the officers.
      • Exhibits include an officers barge captured during the French invasion of 1796.
verb bɑːdʒbɑrdʒ
  • 1no object, with adverbial of direction Move forcefully or roughly.

    闯;冲

    we can't just barge into a private garden

    我们不能硬冲进私人花园。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • She said she and the electrocardiogram technician argued regularly because the technician would often barge into her consulting room while Langley was seeing patients.
    • It would be considered somewhat rude to barge into your boss's house,’ he stammered.
    • The audience watches intently, but the spell is broken when three boisterous local kids barge into the gallery.
    • My job really wasn't to do filing or take phone calls, it was to stand in front of the door if his wife got the idea in her head to turn up and barge into the surgery.
    • When you eventually wise up, faux police barge into your hotel and demand massive bribes in exchange for your freedom.
    • Nobody can barge into my house uninvited and manhandle me.
    • And Ian seems knocked out cold, as the campers and Carrie all barge into the room.
    • According to the police, the activists allegedly tried to barge into the theatre on Sankey Road.
    • I'll be back in the evening to check on your bandages, but until then you're free to wander about, as long as you don't barge into any of the patient rooms.
    • They barge into the house and demand money and gold.
    • The message from them is that anyone can barge into your home at any time and you must keep quiet, watch and must not protect your property or even yourselves, as Tony Martin did.
    • Frances didn't usually knock; she just barges into every room or bathroom, for that matter.
    • Push, barge, I'm more important than you, get out of my way, it's your fault, no I'm not saying excuse me thank you or sorry, or acknowledging your presence.
    • They said no and asked him to leave but he returned minutes later and managed to barge into their kitchen where Mr Tulej confronted him and was stabbed.
    • When you sit down to eat tonight, may armed men not barge into your house and search your wife's underwear drawer.
    • I didn't want to barge into his home like this and shove two girls down his throat, but I had no other choice.
    • And anyway, he knew better than to barge into my room uninvited.
    • Seven hitmen barge into an apartment used by a top Indian mafia boss.
    • I didn't barge into your apartment without warning.
    • So I chose to barge into one of the department offices to check if they had any water for a thirsty man.
    Synonyms
    push, shove, force, elbow, shoulder, jostle, bludgeon, bulldoze, muscle
    1. 1.1barge in Intrude or interrupt rudely or awkwardly.
      打扰;插手
      sorry to barge in on your cosy evening

      很抱歉打扰你们温馨的夜晚。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • Speakers are relieved to find that they won't be sleeping in a hammock out on the porch, and that their hosts won't be barging in every half-hour to try and sell some more Amway products.
      • Normally, our digital tools are intrusive, constantly barging in to demand our attention with e-mail alerts, beeping instant messages and phone calls.
      • The doctor came barging in and ruined my happy place by saying, ‘I think you're ready to go home.’
      • And when he'd come barging in on you, he would be talking out of his head about something you wouldn't even know what he was mad about.
      • I am quite happy being miserable and I don't want you barging in and ruining it.
      • But dedicated lanes should be monitored so that buses move only on them, without other vehicles barging in.
      • Our young pups were having a good scamper when a man from the council came barging in with a clipboard shouting ‘No, no, no!’
      • Kaplan's got both his hats on at the same time, and the travel writer (who likes flavors and vistas) keeps barging in.
      • I told the angel of my intentions and asked forgiveness for barging in so rudely before.
      • But Zack can't abide another person having a few moments of privacy, generally barging in and making his presence known.
      • There aren't political questions here, except potentially if stupid lawyers come barging in and start treating games as something other than games.
      • Victor could tell that Omar was angry with someone barging in the palace meeting room and interrupting him.
      • He became notorious for showing up at events to which he was not invited and barging in, often as his German general character.
      • In fact, it's just about to get steamy when the door bursts open and Lisa, Kim and Zoë barge in.
      • If you stage any kind of fake fight or attack, this is the guy who will think it's real and barge in and try to break it up to save the day.
      • Just then Hunter Niall came barging in the now broken door.
      • It is true that nowadays people are less willing to wait and more people than ever seem to barge in rudely and think nothing of it.
      • See, I went to the gym for the first time in a long time Saturday morning, and then Sunday night Aunt Flo came barging in.
      • You have the best of intentions, you're old enough to feel confident about interrupting anything that isn't appropriate, yet you can't just go barging in.
      • Mid-interview, his adopted son, Michael, noisily interrupts as he barged in with a few friends clutching a bunch of bananas.
      Synonyms
      burst in, break in, butt in, cut in, interrupt, intervene, intrude, encroach
      gatecrash
      informal horn in
    2. 1.2with object (chiefly in a sporting context) run into and collide with (someone), typically intentionally.
      (主要用于体育运动,尤指蓄意)冲撞
      you can use this method to barge an opponent

      你可以用这种方法去冲撞对手。

      just barge the other skater off the ball
      Example sentencesExamples
      • As the France international defender pulled up to allow the ball to run out of play, Beattie first barged his opponent and then butted him in the back of the head.
      • Parity persisted until two minutes before half-time when, after Muir had been penalised for barging in the lineout, Monro put over his second goal to give Heriot's a 6-3 interval lead.
      • Wing Jon Steel gave Caley a glimmer of hope with a late run, but when he was barged into touch by Delme Williams, the chance was gone.
      • With Thomson about to nod his second from point blank range he was barged off the ball by Scott Thomson.
      • Just practicing the time-wasting skills that I have developed over time. The triplets were messing around as usual, trying to barge me into walls, etc.
      • McCrickard then off loaded to Simon Gribben and although he was barged over by Shane McMahon, he still managed to squeeze his shot past Featherstone.
      • There is no doubt that a Nottingham player was barged off the ball, but he was at least five metres off-side, in front of the kicker.
      • Or Bobo Balde crazily barging David Clarkson off the ball as the Motherwell man bounded into the box four minutes later to concede a penalty slotted away by Richie Forlan for an equaliser.
      • Earning their stripes: Home captain Scott Thomson tries to dig the ball out for Dunfermline as Partick Thistle's Jamie Mitchell attempts to barge him out of the way at East End Park yesterday.
      • But a two-man overlap on the right went begging and 13 minutes later Plymouth were level, No8 Dan Ward-Smith barging in seconds after being held up over the line.
      • The first, for a shoulder charge by Luke Young, was justifiably denied but the second, when Fortune barged him in the back, looked a good shout.
      • When I came out of my cubicle and crossed to the washbasin, the mother barged me out of the way as she went to catch up with Nana.
      • It's like they're racing you, barging you out of the way from the side.
      • Stenhouse put Hawick ahead for the first time when Hawks were penalised for barging in the lineout.
      • Garcia almost escapes in behind the Tunisia defence, but the burly figure of Jaidi barges him out of the way.
      • When Martin Bullock tried to barge another motorist off the road and hurled abuse at him he picked on the wrong man.
      • In the other, I was barged into by a lorry when the driver ran out of room on his side of the road.
      • The powerful striker barged his man out the way before bravely stretching to toe poke the ball past keeper Phil Naisbett for his first strike in five months.
      • The players who exemplify the respective styles of their teams are Henry and Emile Heskey, an awesome beast who can barge Martin Keown off a 50-50 ball and charge goalwards.
      • And then this evening, throwing off her melancholy, she had barged him without warning and jinked away with a cheeky backward glance, rolling a couple of the cubs onto their backs as she ran.
      Synonyms
      collide with, be in collision with, hit, strike, crash into, smash into, knock into, plough into, barge into, meet head-on, ram
  • 2with object Convey (freight) by barge.

    用驳船运载(货物)

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Arriving in 1888 Sleigh took up work at Orange, New South Wales, and soon after, with a partner, began barging cargo on the Murray and Darling rivers.
    • He had lingered a year at home before making off again, and now, two years later he had finally barged his way home.
    • The aircraft were barged to Hawaii, an epic journey in itself, for the main portion of the aerial filming.
    • Harvested logs are trucked to a sort south west of Sandspit where they are sorted and put in the water before being barged to Howe Sound, near Vancouver.
    • These considerations can include barging equipment to the site, building a log dump and skids, or a dryland sort, checking for rock cuts, end haul areas and spoil sites, and the installation of bridges.
    • Another voice has been added to those against barging cargo up the Cooper River.
    • Shippers may be more likely to look at alternatives such as barging cargo from one port to another, or transloading freight via truck and rail, as over-the-road transportation obstacles become more prevalent.
    • They do frown on barging coal there which is why I didn't do it.
    • He opens a window onto England's coal-fueled economy at the turn of the century, with vivid descriptions of the mines and the canals that were constructed to barge the coal.
    • Barging freight may become necessary.
    • We have tried carpooling, vanpooling, buses, commuter and intercity trains, even bike paths-and we are about to start barging freight on Long Island Sound.
    • For example, does this increase in autonomy mean that the Hauraki Islanders have to dispose of their own rubbish on their island instead of barging it back to Auckland?
    • At the sort, wood is bucked to length, trimmed and scaled before being barged to Howe Sound, just north of Vancouver.
    • The potential of barging freight from Waterside industrial areas to Southampton across the River Test is to be investigated.

Origin

Middle English (denoting a small seagoing vessel): from Old French, perhaps based on Greek baris 'Egyptian boat'.

  • A barge was originally a small seagoing vessel rather than a flat-bottomed boat for carrying freight. The word is French and probably comes ultimately from Greek baris, which referred to a kind of Egyptian boat used on the Nile. The sense ‘move forcefully or roughly’ (late 19th century) refers to the way a heavily laden, unwieldy barge might collide with the bank or other traffic. If you wouldn't touch something with a bargepole you refuse to have anything to do with it. The equivalent expression in America says that you wouldn't touch something with a ten-foot pole.

Rhymes

charge, enlarge, large, marge, raj, reportage, sarge, sparge, Swaraj, taj, undercharge

Definition of barge in US English:

barge

nounbɑrdʒbärj
  • 1A flat-bottomed boat for carrying freight, typically on canals and rivers, either under its own power or towed by another.

    (运河或河流中自行或被拖曳的)大型平底货船,驳船

    Example sentencesExamples
    • When the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers lets water out of Georgia's West Point Lake to bring barges up the Chattahoochee River, it pulls the plug on recreational boating, too.
    • The barge carrying the linkspans arrived from Poland early on Tuesday morning.
    • Over on the river, flat-bottomed barges being loaded with cargo and refugees headed off down the river.
    • Although built in 1953 she reflects the design of horse drawn barges used when the canal first opened more than 200 years ago.
    • Transport now includes harbour ferries, and ferries or barges on rivers or lakes.
    • He spent his childhood on canal barges until he became a farmhand at the age of 12.
    • Farmers throughout the Midwest and southern states ship their produce on barges down the Mississippi River to New Orleans, where they are loaded onto ocean-going vessels.
    • We hear the chants of the trackers as they pull the barge on the canal.
    • During slack water, tugs tow freight barges and rafts of logs through the narrows with scant room to manoeuvre.
    • In Bordeaux, barges must carry chunks of the fuselage up the Garonne River under an 18 th-century bridge that offers scant clearance.
    • After checking into their hotel when they arrive, they can stroll up to where the many canal barges are moored.
    • The United States is a very attractive market, easy to access by ocean-going vessels and river barges.
    • The community council was waiting upon written confirmation from Waterways Ireland that they could extend the operating area of the barge from the canal to the Barrow.
    • His father owns mills in the country and a lot of the barges on the canal and the Thames.
    • Pupils were treated to a trip to Athy, where they visited the Heritage Centre and had a trip in a barge along the canal.
    • The lift was originally used to carry barges of salt, coal and clay.
    • The Saram was riddled with shallows and waterfalls above Derm, but from that point south river barges could ferry them down the lower Saram, Morvan, and Bellwater to the Bay of Kolvania.
    • Now, the barge will ply the canal again, as it once did in the 1940s.
    • Up at the top of 274 steps, Dordrecht and its bridges, rivers and ponderous barges lay open for admiration.
    • At night, its surface always glittered with the lanterns of passing trade ships and river barges.
    Synonyms
    lighter, canal boat, flatboat
    1. 1.1 A long ornamental boat used for pleasure or ceremony.
      (游玩或典礼中用的)华丽大游艇,画舫
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Boats carry people from one place to another, farmers and fishermen bring their produce to the city to sell, and every year the king of Thailand holds important ceremonies on the water in his royal barge.
      • He said this week he wants to build a marina there with up to 300 boat slips and install a barge with a bandstand.
      • Surrounded by a lake in the centre of Bandar Seri Begawan, the ceremonial barge remains unused.
      • Each year, thousands of tourist flock to Robertstown to enjoy the natural amenities in the area, with most visitors taking in a trip on the barge along the Grand Canal.
      • Many involved smaller boats, such as tugs, barges and fishing boats, in the Malacca Straits and Indonesian waters.
      • One of the most moving and unforgettable moments for all who witnessed that sad and highly emotive day of his funeral was to watch the barge carrying him down the mighty River Thames.
      • He purchased the business in 1995 with his wife, Barbara, and rents out canal barges to holidaymakers.
      • There rode ships from France, England, Holland, China and Japan, while innumerable boats and gilded barges rowed by sixty men plied to and fro.
      • Starting at the Palais Rohan, where Napoleon dumped Josephine, long glass-roofed bateaux mouches, or river barges, follow a lazy route through the Ill canals.
      • One of Calderdale's most colourful characters got the send-off he wanted when a barge carrying his coffin ferried him to his final resting place.
      • Minister O'Donoghue also spoke of the town as a popular boating centre and a base for the pleasure barges on the Barrow.
      • A second gong sounds and the curtains fall off the barge that is being towed behind the boat.
      • Until very recently, the casino had to be an actual boat, not a barge, even if it never left the dock, making for cramped conditions.
      • The Museum of Richmond is hosting a talk on royal barges and other boats as part of its Tudor by the Thames activities week.
      • This shows the aged and ailing Richelieu slumped against cushions in his barge, towing the boat in which the young and healthy conspirators are being taken to their place of execution.
      • But like this horse-riding character, Eggers is not on a pleasure barge.
    2. 1.2 A boat used by the chief officers of a warship.
      (旗舰将官的)专用艇
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The last anyone heard of him he was an oarsman on an officer's barge.
      • Exhibits include an officers barge captured during the French invasion of 1796.
      • We came over in the barge to the Hall with his Excellency, the ladies and the officers.
verbbɑrdʒbärj
  • 1no object, with adverbial of direction Move forcefully or roughly.

    闯;冲

    we can't just barge into a private garden

    我们不能硬冲进私人花园。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • According to the police, the activists allegedly tried to barge into the theatre on Sankey Road.
    • So I chose to barge into one of the department offices to check if they had any water for a thirsty man.
    • My job really wasn't to do filing or take phone calls, it was to stand in front of the door if his wife got the idea in her head to turn up and barge into the surgery.
    • And anyway, he knew better than to barge into my room uninvited.
    • Nobody can barge into my house uninvited and manhandle me.
    • When you eventually wise up, faux police barge into your hotel and demand massive bribes in exchange for your freedom.
    • She said she and the electrocardiogram technician argued regularly because the technician would often barge into her consulting room while Langley was seeing patients.
    • They barge into the house and demand money and gold.
    • They said no and asked him to leave but he returned minutes later and managed to barge into their kitchen where Mr Tulej confronted him and was stabbed.
    • I didn't barge into your apartment without warning.
    • I didn't want to barge into his home like this and shove two girls down his throat, but I had no other choice.
    • Push, barge, I'm more important than you, get out of my way, it's your fault, no I'm not saying excuse me thank you or sorry, or acknowledging your presence.
    • Frances didn't usually knock; she just barges into every room or bathroom, for that matter.
    • The audience watches intently, but the spell is broken when three boisterous local kids barge into the gallery.
    • And Ian seems knocked out cold, as the campers and Carrie all barge into the room.
    • I'll be back in the evening to check on your bandages, but until then you're free to wander about, as long as you don't barge into any of the patient rooms.
    • Seven hitmen barge into an apartment used by a top Indian mafia boss.
    • The message from them is that anyone can barge into your home at any time and you must keep quiet, watch and must not protect your property or even yourselves, as Tony Martin did.
    • When you sit down to eat tonight, may armed men not barge into your house and search your wife's underwear drawer.
    • It would be considered somewhat rude to barge into your boss's house,’ he stammered.
    Synonyms
    push, shove, force, elbow, shoulder, jostle, bludgeon, bulldoze, muscle
    1. 1.1barge in Intrude or interrupt rudely or awkwardly.
      打扰;插手
      sorry to barge in on your cozy evening

      很抱歉打扰你们温馨的夜晚。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • And when he'd come barging in on you, he would be talking out of his head about something you wouldn't even know what he was mad about.
      • In fact, it's just about to get steamy when the door bursts open and Lisa, Kim and Zoë barge in.
      • I am quite happy being miserable and I don't want you barging in and ruining it.
      • Our young pups were having a good scamper when a man from the council came barging in with a clipboard shouting ‘No, no, no!’
      • But Zack can't abide another person having a few moments of privacy, generally barging in and making his presence known.
      • It is true that nowadays people are less willing to wait and more people than ever seem to barge in rudely and think nothing of it.
      • I told the angel of my intentions and asked forgiveness for barging in so rudely before.
      • There aren't political questions here, except potentially if stupid lawyers come barging in and start treating games as something other than games.
      • He became notorious for showing up at events to which he was not invited and barging in, often as his German general character.
      • Mid-interview, his adopted son, Michael, noisily interrupts as he barged in with a few friends clutching a bunch of bananas.
      • The doctor came barging in and ruined my happy place by saying, ‘I think you're ready to go home.’
      • If you stage any kind of fake fight or attack, this is the guy who will think it's real and barge in and try to break it up to save the day.
      • Kaplan's got both his hats on at the same time, and the travel writer (who likes flavors and vistas) keeps barging in.
      • But dedicated lanes should be monitored so that buses move only on them, without other vehicles barging in.
      • You have the best of intentions, you're old enough to feel confident about interrupting anything that isn't appropriate, yet you can't just go barging in.
      • Just then Hunter Niall came barging in the now broken door.
      • Victor could tell that Omar was angry with someone barging in the palace meeting room and interrupting him.
      • See, I went to the gym for the first time in a long time Saturday morning, and then Sunday night Aunt Flo came barging in.
      • Normally, our digital tools are intrusive, constantly barging in to demand our attention with e-mail alerts, beeping instant messages and phone calls.
      • Speakers are relieved to find that they won't be sleeping in a hammock out on the porch, and that their hosts won't be barging in every half-hour to try and sell some more Amway products.
      Synonyms
      burst in, break in, butt in, cut in, interrupt, intervene, intrude, encroach
    2. 1.2 (chiefly in a sporting context) collide with.
      (主要用于体育运动,尤指蓄意)冲撞
      displays of dissent, such as deliberately barging into the umpire
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Wing Jon Steel gave Caley a glimmer of hope with a late run, but when he was barged into touch by Delme Williams, the chance was gone.
      • Just practicing the time-wasting skills that I have developed over time. The triplets were messing around as usual, trying to barge me into walls, etc.
      • With Thomson about to nod his second from point blank range he was barged off the ball by Scott Thomson.
      • Earning their stripes: Home captain Scott Thomson tries to dig the ball out for Dunfermline as Partick Thistle's Jamie Mitchell attempts to barge him out of the way at East End Park yesterday.
      • The players who exemplify the respective styles of their teams are Henry and Emile Heskey, an awesome beast who can barge Martin Keown off a 50-50 ball and charge goalwards.
      • The powerful striker barged his man out the way before bravely stretching to toe poke the ball past keeper Phil Naisbett for his first strike in five months.
      • McCrickard then off loaded to Simon Gribben and although he was barged over by Shane McMahon, he still managed to squeeze his shot past Featherstone.
      • And then this evening, throwing off her melancholy, she had barged him without warning and jinked away with a cheeky backward glance, rolling a couple of the cubs onto their backs as she ran.
      • Garcia almost escapes in behind the Tunisia defence, but the burly figure of Jaidi barges him out of the way.
      • When I came out of my cubicle and crossed to the washbasin, the mother barged me out of the way as she went to catch up with Nana.
      • In the other, I was barged into by a lorry when the driver ran out of room on his side of the road.
      • As the France international defender pulled up to allow the ball to run out of play, Beattie first barged his opponent and then butted him in the back of the head.
      • Parity persisted until two minutes before half-time when, after Muir had been penalised for barging in the lineout, Monro put over his second goal to give Heriot's a 6-3 interval lead.
      • There is no doubt that a Nottingham player was barged off the ball, but he was at least five metres off-side, in front of the kicker.
      • When Martin Bullock tried to barge another motorist off the road and hurled abuse at him he picked on the wrong man.
      • But a two-man overlap on the right went begging and 13 minutes later Plymouth were level, No8 Dan Ward-Smith barging in seconds after being held up over the line.
      • Or Bobo Balde crazily barging David Clarkson off the ball as the Motherwell man bounded into the box four minutes later to concede a penalty slotted away by Richie Forlan for an equaliser.
      • It's like they're racing you, barging you out of the way from the side.
      • Stenhouse put Hawick ahead for the first time when Hawks were penalised for barging in the lineout.
      • The first, for a shoulder charge by Luke Young, was justifiably denied but the second, when Fortune barged him in the back, looked a good shout.
      Synonyms
      collide with, be in collision with, hit, strike, crash into, smash into, knock into, plough into, barge into, meet head-on, ram
  • 2with object Convey (freight) by barge.

    用驳船运载(货物)

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The potential of barging freight from Waterside industrial areas to Southampton across the River Test is to be investigated.
    • We have tried carpooling, vanpooling, buses, commuter and intercity trains, even bike paths-and we are about to start barging freight on Long Island Sound.
    • Barging freight may become necessary.
    • Harvested logs are trucked to a sort south west of Sandspit where they are sorted and put in the water before being barged to Howe Sound, near Vancouver.
    • Arriving in 1888 Sleigh took up work at Orange, New South Wales, and soon after, with a partner, began barging cargo on the Murray and Darling rivers.
    • Shippers may be more likely to look at alternatives such as barging cargo from one port to another, or transloading freight via truck and rail, as over-the-road transportation obstacles become more prevalent.
    • At the sort, wood is bucked to length, trimmed and scaled before being barged to Howe Sound, just north of Vancouver.
    • Another voice has been added to those against barging cargo up the Cooper River.
    • They do frown on barging coal there which is why I didn't do it.
    • For example, does this increase in autonomy mean that the Hauraki Islanders have to dispose of their own rubbish on their island instead of barging it back to Auckland?
    • These considerations can include barging equipment to the site, building a log dump and skids, or a dryland sort, checking for rock cuts, end haul areas and spoil sites, and the installation of bridges.
    • The aircraft were barged to Hawaii, an epic journey in itself, for the main portion of the aerial filming.
    • He opens a window onto England's coal-fueled economy at the turn of the century, with vivid descriptions of the mines and the canals that were constructed to barge the coal.
    • He had lingered a year at home before making off again, and now, two years later he had finally barged his way home.

Origin

Middle English (denoting a small seagoing vessel): from Old French, perhaps based on Greek baris ‘Egyptian boat’.

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