释义 |
Definition of gridlock in English: gridlocknoun ˈɡrɪdlɒkˈɡrɪdˌlɑk 1mass noun A situation of very severe traffic congestion. the city reaches gridlock during peak hours Example sentencesExamples - Nobody will thank the planners if they face daily gridlock getting to and from their homes.
- A number of ideas are being looked at by Colchester Council to bring an end to rush-hour gridlock.
- The aim is to rid the town of heavy through traffic which is creating gridlock.
- One open-air concert starring Robbie Williams attracted 370,000 people and caused gridlock for miles.
- The predictable result was gridlock on the highways.
- Traffic lights lost power, causing gridlock all across the city.
- Mr Weston said: ‘It was total gridlock and we're determined it won't happen again.’
- People feared the development would cause traffic gridlock and claimed noisy fans would make their lives a misery.
- In Edinburgh, six-mile tailbacks of commuter traffic brought gridlock to much of the city for more than three hours.
- There was gridlock on some roads when 200,000 people converged on RAF Fairford for last summer's two-day event.
- York's traffic was plunged into rush-hour gridlock again as half-term holidaymakers joined commuters on the congested roads.
- A meeting was convened to discuss possible ways to prevent total gridlock.
- How else can we deal with the looming threat of climate change and gridlock on the roads?
- Diversions left early morning motorists facing huge tailbacks and the gridlock is expected to continue tonight.
- London's new congestion charging experiment - designed to ease traffic gridlock in the capital - went live this morning.
- The A1237 fails in that too many roads feed into it causing gridlock at peak times.
- The best way to ease gridlock is to voluntarily switch to other forms of travel, where possible.
- And that flood of goods is threatening to create gridlock on the roads and rails of Southern California.
- If we want to keep motorists sane and avoid total the gridlock of Saturday last, now is the time to start planning.
- A virtual gridlock exists around this area between 4.30 pm and 6.30 pm.
Synonyms congestion, traffic jam, jam, tailback, hold-up, bottleneck, queue, stoppage, obstruction 2 another term for deadlock (sense 1 of the noun) Example sentencesExamples - President Bashar Al-Assad ended the gridlock by attending Arafat's funeral in November 2004.
- But Fontaine was also slowed by the gridlock created by internal Liberal Party machinations.
- That could lead to months of gridlock and policy drift, say some analysts.
- The move to inject liquidity started in Asia as the Bank of Japan reacted early to head off fears of a global gridlock.
- But he is up to his neck in it right now, and potentially faces years of policy gridlock in city hall.
- Less than four years into the life of the parliament we seem to be facing the prospect of legislative gridlock.
- And still the returns prophesied continued political gridlock in an evenly divided nation.
- Wall Street likes legislative gridlock because politicians cannot apply their financial ideas.
- For the past few decades regional resource and environmental policy and management have been in and out of decision gridlocks in many regions of North America, Europe, and Australia.
- Proponents say a parliamentary system would end the gridlock between the executive and legislature that dogs Philippine politics.
- Months of political gridlock have taken the shine off of Chen's victory.
Origin1980s (originally US): from grid (in sense 2) + lock1. Definition of gridlock in US English: gridlocknounˈɡridˌläkˈɡrɪdˌlɑk 1A traffic jam affecting a whole network of intersecting streets. 交通全面大堵塞,交通瘫痪 the city reaches gridlock during peak hours Example sentencesExamples - Diversions left early morning motorists facing huge tailbacks and the gridlock is expected to continue tonight.
- York's traffic was plunged into rush-hour gridlock again as half-term holidaymakers joined commuters on the congested roads.
- A virtual gridlock exists around this area between 4.30 pm and 6.30 pm.
- The predictable result was gridlock on the highways.
- London's new congestion charging experiment - designed to ease traffic gridlock in the capital - went live this morning.
- In Edinburgh, six-mile tailbacks of commuter traffic brought gridlock to much of the city for more than three hours.
- There was gridlock on some roads when 200,000 people converged on RAF Fairford for last summer's two-day event.
- A number of ideas are being looked at by Colchester Council to bring an end to rush-hour gridlock.
- Mr Weston said: ‘It was total gridlock and we're determined it won't happen again.’
- A meeting was convened to discuss possible ways to prevent total gridlock.
- Nobody will thank the planners if they face daily gridlock getting to and from their homes.
- The A1237 fails in that too many roads feed into it causing gridlock at peak times.
- Traffic lights lost power, causing gridlock all across the city.
- If we want to keep motorists sane and avoid total the gridlock of Saturday last, now is the time to start planning.
- People feared the development would cause traffic gridlock and claimed noisy fans would make their lives a misery.
- One open-air concert starring Robbie Williams attracted 370,000 people and caused gridlock for miles.
- How else can we deal with the looming threat of climate change and gridlock on the roads?
- The aim is to rid the town of heavy through traffic which is creating gridlock.
- And that flood of goods is threatening to create gridlock on the roads and rails of Southern California.
- The best way to ease gridlock is to voluntarily switch to other forms of travel, where possible.
Synonyms congestion, traffic jam, jam, tailback, hold-up, bottleneck, queue, stoppage, obstruction 2 another term for deadlock (sense 1 of the noun) Example sentencesExamples - Wall Street likes legislative gridlock because politicians cannot apply their financial ideas.
- But he is up to his neck in it right now, and potentially faces years of policy gridlock in city hall.
- President Bashar Al-Assad ended the gridlock by attending Arafat's funeral in November 2004.
- Proponents say a parliamentary system would end the gridlock between the executive and legislature that dogs Philippine politics.
- For the past few decades regional resource and environmental policy and management have been in and out of decision gridlocks in many regions of North America, Europe, and Australia.
- That could lead to months of gridlock and policy drift, say some analysts.
- Less than four years into the life of the parliament we seem to be facing the prospect of legislative gridlock.
- Months of political gridlock have taken the shine off of Chen's victory.
- And still the returns prophesied continued political gridlock in an evenly divided nation.
- The move to inject liquidity started in Asia as the Bank of Japan reacted early to head off fears of a global gridlock.
- But Fontaine was also slowed by the gridlock created by internal Liberal Party machinations.
Origin1980s (originally US): from grid (in gridlock (sense 2)) + lock. |