释义 |
verb kəʊpkoʊp [no object]1(of a person) deal effectively with something difficult. (人)应付;(妥善)处理 his ability to cope with stress 他对付压力的能力。 it all got too much for me and I couldn't cope 对我来说太难了,我无力应付。 Example sentencesExamples - Others suggested that labels helped people cope better, gave them legitimacy, and signalled protected funding and physician time.
- By 2000 he could no longer cope living alone and stopped work.
- What are the personal characteristics we need to cope effectively with rapid change?
- But trouble coping with pressure is part of what drives Baker to drink.
- All I can say about it is nice people are easy to deal with and unpleasant people are much more difficult to cope with.
- In a police interview the 39-year-old unemployed man, who is not being identified for legal reasons, admitted he found it difficult to cope with the children.
- Would she be able to cope living with Thomas, whom she didn't like?
- At present Rand Water is easily coping with water demands, with the correct technology and expertise in place.
- I was blessed with ward staff who had coped successfully with other difficult situations.
- How do you cope living with such a high-profile woman?
- Over the years I learned where the controls were and coped pretty well.
- Some young people do not cope very well with school and may end up being excluded.
- Frank Smith related how his son was a sensitive person who did not cope well with crises.
- The early exchanges were even enough with both sides having difficulty coping with the desperate conditions.
- Urban and rural dwellers have adopted creative survival strategies, that have helped them cope with difficult times.
- Learning to cope effectively with stress may help prevent illness or reduce the chance that the child will behave inappropriately.
- I used the page to deal with my inability to cope at that moment.
- "I don't cope well with the unrelenting demands of professional rugby, " he said then.
- Hospitals across the country have been inundated with patients unable to cope at home.
- Understanding the need for change is essential for the ability to successfully cope with these challenges.
Synonyms manage, survive, subsist, look after oneself, fend for oneself, shift for oneself, stand on one's own two feet, carry on, get through, get on, get along, get by, muddle through, muddle along, scrape by, bear up, make the grade, come through, hold one's own, keep one's end up, keep one's head above water, keep the wolf from the door, weather the storm informal make out, hack it, paddle one's own canoe informal rub along deal with, handle, manage, address, face, face up to, confront, tackle, sort out, take care of, take in hand, get to grips with, contend with, grapple with, wrestle with, struggle with, tussle with put up with, get through, weather, endure, withstand, stand up to, bear, brave, accept, come to terms with master, overcome, surmount, get over, get the better of, beat informal stomach, swallow - 1.1 (of a machine or system) have the capacity to deal successfully with.
(机器或系统)可以应付;能够对付 the roads are barely adequate to cope with the present traffic 这些道路几乎无法应付当前的交通状况。 Example sentencesExamples - There is a debrief meeting today and clearly the point we will be making to the council is our services cannot cope with that number.
- Our aim was to combine all the most demanding operating conditions for the engine, and to guarantee the engine can cope with them.
- It soon became apparent that Reynolds rear tyre could not cope with the drying track and he was starting to lose time.
- He added that a Caribbean development fund was also essential to help smaller economies cope with increased competition.
- But how did online news services cope with the massive surge in demand?
- The airport has recruited an extra 500 staff to cope with huge influx of supporters.
- Health chiefs attended a recent emergency meeting to discuss how local health services will cope with an influx of injured servicemen and women from the Gulf.
- Residents said local infrastructure could not cope with so many new houses and questioned if town centre facilities were adequate for the increase in population.
- But after last year's problems there are concerns about whether the system can cope with processing millions of changes.
- My main concern is how St. George's infrastructure will cope with the arrival of 2,500 passengers at once.
- No doubt it needed beefing up so that the transmission could cope with the extra power, but I missed its former silky action.
- This is not to say the court system couldn't cope with some reform to deal with new situations.
- Every postcard has to be scanned and there is a high rate of rejection mainly because the machines cannot cope with the calligraphic variations flowing from the farmer's pen!
- At this time of year, we are at our most busiest and occasionally, we get more film in than the printer processing machine can cope with.
- Research indicates that something as simple as drinking a liter of sports drink per hour appears to help the immune system cope with intense exercise.
- And could the Australian economy cope with a mass exodus from credit?
- Many Asian governments have given up on financial restructuring, saying their economies can't cope with it now.
- It was no wonder traffic in the east was reduced to a snail's pace when so many people were working in the area leading to congestion which the roads and infrastructure could not cope with.
- The manufacturing sector of British economy could not cope with a further appreciation in the strength of sterling.
- The station had to replace its fax machine three times to cope with the flood of paper.
OriginMiddle English (in the sense 'meet in battle, come to blows'): from Old French coper, colper, from cop, colp 'a blow', via Latin from Greek kolaphos 'blow with the fist'. Nowadays to cope with something is to manage or deal with it effectively, but the word used to mean ‘to meet in battle’ or ‘to come to blows’. Its source is the Latin word colpus ‘a blow’, which is also the root of coup (Late Middle English), ‘a sudden seizure of power from a government’ often used in its French form coup d'état (mid 17th century). Coppice (Late Middle English), woodland where the trees have regularly been cut back, and its shortening copse (late 16th century) also go back to colpus, from the idea that they have been cut back with blows.
Rhymesaslope, dope, elope, grope, hope, interlope, lope, mope, nope, ope, pope, rope, scope, soap, taupe, tope, trope noun kəʊpkoʊp 1A long, loose cloak worn by a priest or bishop on ceremonial occasions. (牧师或主教在举行仪式时穿的)斗篷式长袍;法衣 Example sentencesExamples - Saints embroidered in metallic and silk threads decorate the orphrey, the ornamental band along the top of the cope as pictured here.
- Made between 1300 and 1320, the cope would have been worn by a high-ranking priest or bishop.
- Here she was vested in her robes of state and was met by the bishop who was to perform the ceremony, with all the chapel Royal in their copes, the bishop mitred.
- 1.1technical, literary A thing resembling or likened to a cloak.
〈技或诗/文〉斗篷状物 the outer shell of clay is called the cope
verb kəʊpkoʊp [with object](in building) cover (a joint or structure) with a coping. (给建筑物)加顶盖 a high wall coped with tiles
OriginMiddle English (denoting a long outdoor cloak): from medieval Latin capa, variant of late Latin cappa (see cap1 and cape1). verbkoʊpkōp [no object]1(of a person) deal effectively with something difficult. (人)应付;(妥善)处理 his ability to cope with stress 他对付压力的能力。 it all got too much for me and I couldn't cope 对我来说太难了,我无力应付。 Example sentencesExamples - "I don't cope well with the unrelenting demands of professional rugby, " he said then.
- At present Rand Water is easily coping with water demands, with the correct technology and expertise in place.
- Urban and rural dwellers have adopted creative survival strategies, that have helped them cope with difficult times.
- How do you cope living with such a high-profile woman?
- Learning to cope effectively with stress may help prevent illness or reduce the chance that the child will behave inappropriately.
- I was blessed with ward staff who had coped successfully with other difficult situations.
- The early exchanges were even enough with both sides having difficulty coping with the desperate conditions.
- In a police interview the 39-year-old unemployed man, who is not being identified for legal reasons, admitted he found it difficult to cope with the children.
- What are the personal characteristics we need to cope effectively with rapid change?
- But trouble coping with pressure is part of what drives Baker to drink.
- Some young people do not cope very well with school and may end up being excluded.
- I used the page to deal with my inability to cope at that moment.
- Others suggested that labels helped people cope better, gave them legitimacy, and signalled protected funding and physician time.
- Would she be able to cope living with Thomas, whom she didn't like?
- Over the years I learned where the controls were and coped pretty well.
- Frank Smith related how his son was a sensitive person who did not cope well with crises.
- Hospitals across the country have been inundated with patients unable to cope at home.
- All I can say about it is nice people are easy to deal with and unpleasant people are much more difficult to cope with.
- Understanding the need for change is essential for the ability to successfully cope with these challenges.
- By 2000 he could no longer cope living alone and stopped work.
Synonyms manage, survive, subsist, look after oneself, fend for oneself, shift for oneself, stand on one's own two feet, carry on, get through, get on, get along, get by, muddle through, muddle along, scrape by, bear up, make the grade, come through, hold one's own, keep one's end up, keep one's head above water, keep the wolf from the door, weather the storm deal with, handle, manage, address, face, face up to, confront, tackle, sort out, take care of, take in hand, get to grips with, contend with, grapple with, wrestle with, struggle with, tussle with - 1.1 (of a machine or system) have the capacity to deal successfully with.
(机器或系统)可以应付;能够对付 the roads are barely adequate to cope with the present traffic 这些道路几乎无法应付当前的交通状况。 Example sentencesExamples - The manufacturing sector of British economy could not cope with a further appreciation in the strength of sterling.
- And could the Australian economy cope with a mass exodus from credit?
- Our aim was to combine all the most demanding operating conditions for the engine, and to guarantee the engine can cope with them.
- It was no wonder traffic in the east was reduced to a snail's pace when so many people were working in the area leading to congestion which the roads and infrastructure could not cope with.
- This is not to say the court system couldn't cope with some reform to deal with new situations.
- Residents said local infrastructure could not cope with so many new houses and questioned if town centre facilities were adequate for the increase in population.
- Research indicates that something as simple as drinking a liter of sports drink per hour appears to help the immune system cope with intense exercise.
- Health chiefs attended a recent emergency meeting to discuss how local health services will cope with an influx of injured servicemen and women from the Gulf.
- It soon became apparent that Reynolds rear tyre could not cope with the drying track and he was starting to lose time.
- Many Asian governments have given up on financial restructuring, saying their economies can't cope with it now.
- Every postcard has to be scanned and there is a high rate of rejection mainly because the machines cannot cope with the calligraphic variations flowing from the farmer's pen!
- The airport has recruited an extra 500 staff to cope with huge influx of supporters.
- My main concern is how St. George's infrastructure will cope with the arrival of 2,500 passengers at once.
- He added that a Caribbean development fund was also essential to help smaller economies cope with increased competition.
- But after last year's problems there are concerns about whether the system can cope with processing millions of changes.
- But how did online news services cope with the massive surge in demand?
- At this time of year, we are at our most busiest and occasionally, we get more film in than the printer processing machine can cope with.
- No doubt it needed beefing up so that the transmission could cope with the extra power, but I missed its former silky action.
- The station had to replace its fax machine three times to cope with the flood of paper.
- There is a debrief meeting today and clearly the point we will be making to the council is our services cannot cope with that number.
OriginMiddle English (in the sense ‘meet in battle, come to blows’): from Old French coper, colper, from cop, colp ‘a blow’, via Latin from Greek kolaphos ‘blow with the fist’. nounkoʊpkōp 1A long, loose cloak worn by a priest or bishop on ceremonial occasions. (牧师或主教在举行仪式时穿的)斗篷式长袍;法衣 Example sentencesExamples - Made between 1300 and 1320, the cope would have been worn by a high-ranking priest or bishop.
- Here she was vested in her robes of state and was met by the bishop who was to perform the ceremony, with all the chapel Royal in their copes, the bishop mitred.
- Saints embroidered in metallic and silk threads decorate the orphrey, the ornamental band along the top of the cope as pictured here.
- 1.1literary, technical A thing resembling or likened to a cloak.
〈技或诗/文〉斗篷状物 the bay and the square were a seamless cope 海湾与广场衔接浑然一体像个斗篷。
verbkoʊpkōp [with object](in building) cover (a joint or structure) with a coping. (给建筑物)加顶盖 a high wall coped with tiles
OriginMiddle English (denoting a long outdoor cloak): from medieval Latin capa, variant of late Latin cappa (see cap and cape). |