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词汇 rove
释义

rove1

verb rəʊvroʊv
  • 1no object, with adverbial of direction Travel constantly without a fixed destination; wander.

    流浪;漫游

    he spent most of the 1990s roving about the Caribbean
    Example sentencesExamples
    • He is now roving about the Gatineau hills north of Ottawa, devoting his time to books on our forestry heritage.
    • No matter how far they rove or how big and strong they grow, there comes a day when they abandon the sea and seek again their high mountain place of birth.
    • It was certainly on my mind as I roved around Gate 5 of Comiskey Park before the 74th All-Star game on the South Side of Chicago.
    • A plant sits in one place and makes glucose from sunlight, carbon dioxide and water, whereas an animal roves about and needs to find its food outside of itself.
    • For many years this was a dangerous frontier land, where pirates roved and merchantmen ventured at their peril.
    • Armies of children were still roving around on the decks.
    • He recognized the demons immediately: deadly humanoids who roved around in gangs.
    • It looked like armies were roving from place to place.
    • It was dusk, and the desert animals roved during the night, the plants would provide a good protection.
    • The dads were out roving around town making sure no little child strayed too far in search of hidden eggs.
    • It could, of course, deploy a huge army of monitors to rove about the countryside checking the actions of every farmer, but this would be very costly.
    • Different animals rove through their hunting grounds.
    • Foul-mouthed mobs roved around the dark Edinburgh streets, looting and vandalising premises owned by Italians.
    • The opportunity to knock somebody out quietly or take a hostage is not often present since enemies tend to rove in groups.
    • He followed them as best he could around the hold and saw them rove back and forth, as if searching for something.
    • Will you come again, when you're not roving up and down Italy like a brigand?
    Synonyms
    wander, roam, ramble, drift, meander, go hither and thither, maunder
    range, travel about
    gallivant
    Scottish stravaig
    Irish streel
    rare vagabond, circumambulate, peregrinate
    1. 1.1with object Wander over or through (a place)
      流浪于;漫游于
      children roving the streets

      在街上流浪的孩子们。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • In the mid-1800s, they roved the streets of St. John's, sometimes attacking spectators or fighting with rival bands.
      • His previous rider was recently killed in combat, and the horse was found roving the battle site and brought here.
      • When drunk they would rove the streets of London, molesting fair damsels and burning down buildings as a lark.
      • The series was one of the first to rove the world, shooting its exteriors in such exotic locations as Madrid, Acapulco, Marrakesh, Rome, Tokyo, Mexico City and even Las Vegas.
      • From the haggard look, rag tag clothing and matted hair it was not difficult to identify her as the mad woman who roved the streets.
      • Maybe you have never even been to the corporate headquarters, and you rove the globe packing a laptop that connects to your company's headquarters.
      • An avid antiquer, Peggy loves to rove the nearby town of Essex for one-of-a-kind furniture and accessories.
      • With all the armed bands of various factions roving the land these days, it was a miracle that they had made it back to the abbey.
      • Like the vast majority of people living in Mexico, he buys his music from one of the 12,000 street vendors who rove the country.
      • She began her job back in 1997, roving the badlands of Quebec and Ontario before heading out to British Columbia to take a position in the PR department.
    2. 1.2usually as adjective roving Travel for one's work, having no fixed base.
      (工作)流动的;无定所的
      he trained as a roving reporter

      他被培训为流动记者。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • In many city plazas, there are roving street vendors selling sweet espresso to passers-by.
      • These were plays performed in fifteenth century England by roving troupes of actors.
      • Doing that risks a disenchanted MP from the right wing getting boozed and leaking his or her displeasure to a roving reporter.
      • These were true economic migrants, businessmen and roving employees who made no apologies about seeking a richer life elsewhere in the sun.
      • As their roving reporter, I covered most of the media awards.
      • An hour will set you back £2.99, but you can get a whole day for a tenner - pretty good value for the roving reporter.
      • For years he was literally on his feet as a roving reporter, plunged into regions of conflict or crisis to try to make sense of it all for us.
      • ‘Gertrude Lawrence was a glamorous, exciting personality who lived a flamboyant and extravagant life,’ he said to a roving reporter.
      • For example, a visitor waiting for a family member in treatment can get gourmet coffee or fresh-squeezed juice from a roving vendor.
      • Our roving reporter caught up with the composer in Berlin to discuss this musical gesture of reconciliation.
      • You'll probably be just a little sickened to hear it's been pretty much plain sailing for this up-and-coming roving reporter.
      • Our roving contributor inspired the wrath of one of our Finnish readers with his almost correct brief history of the previously low profile Aland Islands.
      • During her school years, after her father had left his parish to become a roving minister, she came into contact with the larger Baptist community.
      • But no one can doubt his importance as one the first roving independent explorers armed with a camera.
      • The site has a roving reporter and European Editor in Chief, who writes cheery newsletters from, for instance France, and the Left Coast of the USA.
      • Upon completing his studies, he moved back to Kyrgyzstan and landed a job as roving Central Asia correspondent for Pravda.
      • His resignation as trade and industry secretary lead to promotion as roving ambassador to the Project's international friends.
      • It also operated unconventionally: the founder and director was employed as a roving sales consultant, reporting to the sales manager of whichever country he happened to be in.
      • What is out there course-wise for would-be roving reporters?
      • He has already hired his own roving war correspondent and set up an adventure channel on which mountain climbers will post their own videos.
    3. 1.3 (of a person's eyes) look in changing directions in order to see something thoroughly.
      (眼睛)环顾,扫掠
      the policeman's eyes roved around the pub

      那个警察的眼睛环视着酒吧。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • All eyes rove for something catchy at a handicrafts exhibition - for something utilitarian that will appeal to your aesthetic sense too.
      • Cora's pink eyes were roving over Dervek's bare chest approvingly.
      • He continued to allow his gaze to rove over the gleaming blade, menacingly sharp, as well as its well-decorated hilt.
      • My eyes kept roving to the grandfather clock from time to time.
      • She smiled falsely at everyone around them, her eyes roving.
      • Ryan nodded gravely, his eyes roving over the guests.
      • His just couldn't keep his eyes from looking out of the glass panels and roving over the plains, hoping for a sight of her.
      • Their eyes roved back to the demolished Porsche and wondered what the owner of the car would do if he ever found out who did it.
      • While he spoke, I could see his curious eyes roving over us, trying to understand the unfamiliar sounds that reached his ears.
      • She allowed her gaze to rove over the gentleman, in some odd mix of sizing him up, and curiosity at this stranger from another time.
      • He unsheathed his father's sword and held it in both hands, his eyes roving over the blade with the ancient runes and the ornately designed handle.
      • His eyes roving around the room, searching for a way out of this mess.
      • His eyesight (now back and glitch-less) roved hungrily around the room.
      • In each corner stood a burly guard, their eyes roving over the people materializing every few minutes from seven of the eight walls.
      • She watched his eyes rove quickly over her body, and she smiled at his look of surprise.
      • Inside, my gaze roved over the leather couches, the silken pillows sprawled carelessly all over the place.
      • Geoffrey allowed his eyes to rove over her body, taking in her silver-blue eyes and long, curling blonde hair.
      • The blond man stopped in his tracks, locking his sword into a perfect defensive position, his pale eyes roving into the shadows, searching for the voice's source.
      • The demon's gaze roved and stopped on me.
      • Yet those eyes held nothing but want as they roved up and down him shamelessly.
noun rəʊvroʊv
North American
  • A journey, especially one with no specific destination; an act of wandering.

    〈主美〉(尤指无具体目的地的)旅行;流浪;漫游

    a new exhibit will electrify campuses on its national rove

    一个新的全国性巡回展览将使各大学为之振奋。

Origin

Late 15th century (originally a term in archery in the sense 'shoot at a casual mark of undetermined range'): perhaps from dialect rave 'to stray', probably of Scandinavian origin.

  • rob from Middle English:

    The words rob and robe come from the same ancient root, a word meaning ‘booty’—clothing would have been the kind of property stolen in a raid. To rob Peter to pay Paul is to take something away from one person to pay another. The expression probably refers to the apostles St Peter and St Paul, who in Christian art are often shown together as equals. Although the earliest examples feature robbery, other versions have cropped up over the centuries, such as unclothe Peter to pay Paul and borrow from Peter to pay Paul. The last example probably helped in the additional meaning ‘to pay off one debt only to incur another’. The Scottish and English reavers or reivers, who plundered each other across the border got their name from ‘to reave’, another form of the original word, and those who are bereaved (Old English) have also been robbed of something precious—bereft is the old form of the word. A rover (Middle English) was originally another form of the word, but to rove (Late Middle English) is a different word: it was originally a term in archery meaning ‘shoot at a casual mark of undetermined range’. This may be from dialect rave ‘to stray’, probably of Scandinavian origin.

Rhymes

behove, clove, cove, dove, drove, fauve, grove, interwove, Jove, mauve, shrove, stove, strove, trove, wove

rove2

rəʊvroʊv
  • past of reeve

rove3

noun rəʊvroʊv
  • A sliver of cotton, wool, or other fibre, drawn out and slightly twisted, especially preparatory to spinning.

    粗纱

verb rəʊvroʊv
[with object]
  • Form (slivers of wool, cotton, or other fibre) into roves.

    粗纺

Origin

Late 18th century: of unknown origin.

rove4

noun rəʊvroʊv
  • A small metal plate or ring for a rivet to pass through and be clenched over, especially in boatbuilding.

    (尤指造船用的)铆钉垫圈

    Example sentencesExamples
    • For door experts, it is made of four plain oak boards, held in place by an edging frame and four half-round ledges, all fastened by neat clasping elongated roves.
    • Each nail was driven through the two planks, the rove was placed over the end of the nail, and the point was knocked down over the rove to ‘clench’ the two planks together.
    • The posts and the keel would then be joined with iron roves to start the hull, with the three main sections being wedged securely upright with wooden props.

Origin

Middle English: from Old Norse , with the addition of parasitic -v-.

rove1

verbroʊvrōv
  • 1no object, with adverbial of direction Travel constantly without a fixed destination; wander.

    流浪;漫游

    he spent most of the 1990s roving about the Caribbean
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Foul-mouthed mobs roved around the dark Edinburgh streets, looting and vandalising premises owned by Italians.
    • He is now roving about the Gatineau hills north of Ottawa, devoting his time to books on our forestry heritage.
    • He recognized the demons immediately: deadly humanoids who roved around in gangs.
    • It looked like armies were roving from place to place.
    • He followed them as best he could around the hold and saw them rove back and forth, as if searching for something.
    • A plant sits in one place and makes glucose from sunlight, carbon dioxide and water, whereas an animal roves about and needs to find its food outside of itself.
    • It was dusk, and the desert animals roved during the night, the plants would provide a good protection.
    • Will you come again, when you're not roving up and down Italy like a brigand?
    • The opportunity to knock somebody out quietly or take a hostage is not often present since enemies tend to rove in groups.
    • It could, of course, deploy a huge army of monitors to rove about the countryside checking the actions of every farmer, but this would be very costly.
    • Different animals rove through their hunting grounds.
    • Armies of children were still roving around on the decks.
    • It was certainly on my mind as I roved around Gate 5 of Comiskey Park before the 74th All-Star game on the South Side of Chicago.
    • For many years this was a dangerous frontier land, where pirates roved and merchantmen ventured at their peril.
    • No matter how far they rove or how big and strong they grow, there comes a day when they abandon the sea and seek again their high mountain place of birth.
    • The dads were out roving around town making sure no little child strayed too far in search of hidden eggs.
    Synonyms
    wander, roam, ramble, drift, meander, go hither and thither, maunder
    1. 1.1with object Wander over or through (a place) without a destination.
      流浪于;漫游于
      children roving the streets

      在街上流浪的孩子们。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • Maybe you have never even been to the corporate headquarters, and you rove the globe packing a laptop that connects to your company's headquarters.
      • The series was one of the first to rove the world, shooting its exteriors in such exotic locations as Madrid, Acapulco, Marrakesh, Rome, Tokyo, Mexico City and even Las Vegas.
      • With all the armed bands of various factions roving the land these days, it was a miracle that they had made it back to the abbey.
      • Like the vast majority of people living in Mexico, he buys his music from one of the 12,000 street vendors who rove the country.
      • When drunk they would rove the streets of London, molesting fair damsels and burning down buildings as a lark.
      • She began her job back in 1997, roving the badlands of Quebec and Ontario before heading out to British Columbia to take a position in the PR department.
      • An avid antiquer, Peggy loves to rove the nearby town of Essex for one-of-a-kind furniture and accessories.
      • In the mid-1800s, they roved the streets of St. John's, sometimes attacking spectators or fighting with rival bands.
      • From the haggard look, rag tag clothing and matted hair it was not difficult to identify her as the mad woman who roved the streets.
      • His previous rider was recently killed in combat, and the horse was found roving the battle site and brought here.
    2. 1.2usually as adjective roving Travel for one's work, having no fixed base.
      (工作)流动的;无定所的
      he trained as a roving reporter

      他被培训为流动记者。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • An hour will set you back £2.99, but you can get a whole day for a tenner - pretty good value for the roving reporter.
      • What is out there course-wise for would-be roving reporters?
      • ‘Gertrude Lawrence was a glamorous, exciting personality who lived a flamboyant and extravagant life,’ he said to a roving reporter.
      • Upon completing his studies, he moved back to Kyrgyzstan and landed a job as roving Central Asia correspondent for Pravda.
      • As their roving reporter, I covered most of the media awards.
      • These were plays performed in fifteenth century England by roving troupes of actors.
      • In many city plazas, there are roving street vendors selling sweet espresso to passers-by.
      • Doing that risks a disenchanted MP from the right wing getting boozed and leaking his or her displeasure to a roving reporter.
      • Our roving reporter caught up with the composer in Berlin to discuss this musical gesture of reconciliation.
      • His resignation as trade and industry secretary lead to promotion as roving ambassador to the Project's international friends.
      • For years he was literally on his feet as a roving reporter, plunged into regions of conflict or crisis to try to make sense of it all for us.
      • Our roving contributor inspired the wrath of one of our Finnish readers with his almost correct brief history of the previously low profile Aland Islands.
      • But no one can doubt his importance as one the first roving independent explorers armed with a camera.
      • For example, a visitor waiting for a family member in treatment can get gourmet coffee or fresh-squeezed juice from a roving vendor.
      • You'll probably be just a little sickened to hear it's been pretty much plain sailing for this up-and-coming roving reporter.
      • The site has a roving reporter and European Editor in Chief, who writes cheery newsletters from, for instance France, and the Left Coast of the USA.
      • He has already hired his own roving war correspondent and set up an adventure channel on which mountain climbers will post their own videos.
      • During her school years, after her father had left his parish to become a roving minister, she came into contact with the larger Baptist community.
      • These were true economic migrants, businessmen and roving employees who made no apologies about seeking a richer life elsewhere in the sun.
      • It also operated unconventionally: the founder and director was employed as a roving sales consultant, reporting to the sales manager of whichever country he happened to be in.
    3. 1.3 (of eyes) look in changing directions in order to see something thoroughly.
      (眼睛)环顾,扫掠
      the policeman's eyes roved around the bar

      那个警察的眼睛环视着酒吧。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • Cora's pink eyes were roving over Dervek's bare chest approvingly.
      • In each corner stood a burly guard, their eyes roving over the people materializing every few minutes from seven of the eight walls.
      • All eyes rove for something catchy at a handicrafts exhibition - for something utilitarian that will appeal to your aesthetic sense too.
      • Inside, my gaze roved over the leather couches, the silken pillows sprawled carelessly all over the place.
      • His just couldn't keep his eyes from looking out of the glass panels and roving over the plains, hoping for a sight of her.
      • Ryan nodded gravely, his eyes roving over the guests.
      • Their eyes roved back to the demolished Porsche and wondered what the owner of the car would do if he ever found out who did it.
      • She allowed her gaze to rove over the gentleman, in some odd mix of sizing him up, and curiosity at this stranger from another time.
      • My eyes kept roving to the grandfather clock from time to time.
      • She smiled falsely at everyone around them, her eyes roving.
      • His eyesight (now back and glitch-less) roved hungrily around the room.
      • Yet those eyes held nothing but want as they roved up and down him shamelessly.
      • His eyes roving around the room, searching for a way out of this mess.
      • Geoffrey allowed his eyes to rove over her body, taking in her silver-blue eyes and long, curling blonde hair.
      • He unsheathed his father's sword and held it in both hands, his eyes roving over the blade with the ancient runes and the ornately designed handle.
      • The demon's gaze roved and stopped on me.
      • She watched his eyes rove quickly over her body, and she smiled at his look of surprise.
      • While he spoke, I could see his curious eyes roving over us, trying to understand the unfamiliar sounds that reached his ears.
      • He continued to allow his gaze to rove over the gleaming blade, menacingly sharp, as well as its well-decorated hilt.
      • The blond man stopped in his tracks, locking his sword into a perfect defensive position, his pale eyes roving into the shadows, searching for the voice's source.
nounroʊvrōv
North American
  • A journey, especially one with no specific destination; an act of wandering.

    〈主美〉(尤指无具体目的地的)旅行;流浪;漫游

    a new exhibit will electrify campuses on its national rove

    一个新的全国性巡回展览将使各大学为之振奋。

Origin

Late 15th century (originally a term in archery in the sense ‘shoot at a casual mark of undetermined range’): perhaps from dialect rave ‘to stray’, probably of Scandinavian origin.

rove2

roʊvrōv
  • past of reeve

rove3

nounrōvroʊv
  • A sliver of cotton, wool, or other fiber, drawn out and slightly twisted, especially preparatory to spinning.

    粗纱

verbrōvroʊv
[with object]
  • Form (slivers of wool, cotton, or other fiber) into roves.

    粗纺

Origin

Late 18th century: of unknown origin.

rove4

nounrōvroʊv
  • A small metal plate or ring for a rivet to pass through and be clenched over, especially in boatbuilding.

    (尤指造船用的)铆钉垫圈

    Example sentencesExamples
    • For door experts, it is made of four plain oak boards, held in place by an edging frame and four half-round ledges, all fastened by neat clasping elongated roves.
    • Each nail was driven through the two planks, the rove was placed over the end of the nail, and the point was knocked down over the rove to ‘clench’ the two planks together.
    • The posts and the keel would then be joined with iron roves to start the hull, with the three main sections being wedged securely upright with wooden props.

Origin

Middle English: from Old Norse ró, with the addition of parasitic -v-.

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