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词汇 cabin
释义

Definition of cabin in English:

cabin

nounPlural cabins ˈkabɪnˈkæbən
  • 1A private room or compartment on a ship.

    轮船舱室

    she lay in her cabin on a steamer
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Most of them had stayed up through the night to help the injured and look for survivors, and most were now on board the ship in their cabins, exhausted and asleep.
    • Although pirates would search the ship's cabins for gold and silver, the main loot consisted of cargo such as grain, molasses, and kegs of rum.
    • Flights from either Edinburgh or Glasgow to New York on October 29 are included, and you get a balcony cabin on board the ship.
    • The 44,200-tonne ship will have 148 cabins, 364 beds and travel at 22 knots.
    • There were endless corridors, with doors leading to private cabins, and the occasional public space, such as a plunge pool.
    • There is over $5 million worth of original artwork on board the liner where four-out-of-five cabins feature private balconies.
    • Mid ship cabins are generally more expensive than those at the front or rear of the ship.
    • The captain takes us on a guided tour, and the ship's various cabins and state-rooms are laid open to us in cross-section.
    • They were each found in separate cabins, or compartments of the ship, for which a function could be determined by association with the artefacts found.
    • With the view of the sea from your window, it's rather like being in a cabin on a cruise ship.
    • Therefore they rushed to the vessel and hoped to be transported timely, and were willing to be placed outside the cabins or on the ship's deck.
    • The options are these: If you definitely want to be alone in a single cabin, first look for a ship that has single cabins.
    • The ‘ship’ is equipped with a bridge, crew's cabins and engine and lower deck compartments to make the training as authentic as possible.
    • Profits from the sale of the ship's cabins go to his foundation.
    • The large white ship has 435 cabins with a lower berth capacity of 700 passengers and a crew of about the same number.
    • In addition to the holds, the forecastle, bridge-island, engine room, and stern cabins offer the diver interesting places to explore.
    • The ship has cabins for all the crew, who are mostly Filipino or Syrian, and Pat often spends time on the ship.
    • It is possible to enter the cabins and engine room of this wreck, there is even a stove sitting in the galley.
    • Located where the ship's cabaret used to be, the cabins share a private deck area and hot tub just forward of the stem.
    • You are better off being prosperous and paying tax than going down in the first-class cabins of a sinking ship.
    Synonyms
    berth, stateroom, compartment, room, deckhouse, sleeping quarters
    forecabin, outside cabin
    historical roundhouse
    compartment, passenger area, passenger accommodation
    cab, compartment
    1. 1.1 The area for passengers in an aircraft.
      飞机座舱,客舱
      animals are not allowed in the cabin of the aircraft
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Chemical pesticides were routinely sprayed in passenger cabins on flights to the Caribbean, Latin America, and the South Pacific.
      • Passengers on a Manchester bound flight from America wrestled a man to the floor after he allegedly went on a rampage in the cabin of the aircraft.
      • Rapid travel in small aircraft cabins, and increased trade and commerce facilitate a lightning worldwide spread.
      • Customers can now take a virtual tour of the aircraft cabins, book flights, order special meals and duty-free items and look up jobs in the airline, online.
      • As the door closed, he noticed one of the flight attendants watching him as she hurried toward the passenger cabin.
      • An aircraft cabin can be dehydrating, which can increase the risk of deep vein thrombosis.
      • With the advent of pressurized cabins, the aircraft would be able to fly higher without the requisite oxygen aboard.
      • Now we've added a new element of potential violence and brutality into the aircraft cabin.
      • This might explain why someone working in a nightclub or aircraft cabin could be at a higher risk of catching the disease.
      • The shuttle jolted again, and an explosion ripped through the rear bulkhead of the passenger cabin.
      • Being born is like being tossed out of the luxurious first class cabin of a cruising aircraft.
      • At the time, one could carry one's reed knife inside one's oboe case into the cabin of the aircraft.
      • Present international requirements allow the pressure in the cabins of these aircraft to be reduced to the equivalent of 8000 feet.
      • The European Commission has drawn up a list of items to be banned from aircraft cabins.
      • In the cabin of an aircraft, as all members know, it is quite confined, and it was not possible to crawl across the seats to get at the guy.
      • Such attire is all right in its place, but not in the cramped, claustrophobic conditions of an aircraft cabin.
      • All passengers, regardless of their risk, should move around in their seats and in the aircraft cabin as much as possible during the journey.
      • Passengers entered the cabin through a doorway on the left side of the fuselage.
      • A definitive list of items now banned from aircraft cabins has been released and passengers are urged to comply with the new requirements.
      • The heating and ventilating system served the pilots' compartment as well as the passenger cabin.
  • 2A small wooden shelter or house in a wild or remote area.

    (荒野或偏僻地方的)小木屋;棚屋

    the cabin lay three miles into the reserve
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Could you not get a cheap flight to somewhere beachy, take off your shoes, find a wooden cabin and a man to cook you curry, for a fraction of the cost?
    • My daughter liked to pod them each night at the wooden table in our cabin.
    • For exterior coverings of houses, cabins, or other habitable structures, many organizations have used treated plywood.
    • But mostly shelter is house or cabin or tent - a wall between us and the other of the land around us.
    • But much of England is densely populated and there could never been enough cabins and huts to house us all; our architectural sprawl needs some containment, a bit of planning.
    • Written almost entirely on the back porch of a remote cabin, the laid-back organic nature of the record is no surprise.
    • Clustered around it are a choice of ecodwellings, including wooden cabins on stilts, clay huts with thatched roofs, large tepees and round tents sleeping one.
    • Several walkways have been developed and cabins provided for shelter along the riverbanks and there is also a large hospitality cabin where lunches are served.
    • With winter approaching, we were happy to be housed in cabins rather than tents.
    • Five friends spend a holiday together in a remote cabin in the woods.
    • This cabin had a tree house, so I went up there to read for a bit and take a nap.
    • People own, co-own or rent small, low-impact wooden cabins dotted all over the countryside.
    • There is suitably rustic accommodation around here - wooden lodges and cabins with utterly unspoiled views of lake and mountains.
    • A group of people discover a book of the dead and unleash gore filled horror upon themselves in a remote cabin.
    • It's ideal for remote vacation cabins with no electricity or areas prone to power outages.
    • The two-storey cabins have dark wooden interiors with wraparound walkways and a large front veranda.
    • These wooden cabins evoke a rustic connection with American history and the beautiful natural environment.
    • Summer campers are housed in cabins of twenty-five, each constructed to represent a different country - Korea, Japan, Russia.
    • Wingdims will live in houses, huts, cabins, or any other shelter, they have a wonderful relationship with nature and everything around them.
    • The banished will be flown to a second cabin on another remote island.
    Synonyms
    hut, log cabin, shanty, shack, shed
    chalet
    Scottish bothy, shieling, shiel, but and ben
    North American cabana
    Canadian tilt
    Australian mia-mia, gunyah, humpy
    New Zealand whare
    South African hok
    archaic cot
    North American archaic shebang
  • 3Indian A cubicle or individual work space within a larger office.

    〈印度〉(大办公室中的)小隔间,单间

verbcabins, cabining, cabined ˈkabɪnˈkæbən
[with object]literary
  • Confine within narrow bounds.

    once loosed, the idea of equality is not easily cabined
    Example sentencesExamples
    • But as that argument is narrow, and more easily cabined to just changes in terms, we expect, if we prevail, that's where the Court will decide it.
    • The complexity and multivalence of the receiving tradition prevent the information from being somehow, simply, walled off or cabined.
    • I need the salty sea air in my lungs to flush out the scent of that old man I was cabined with for so long.
    • Now she's an object of pity and scandal in Sydney society, and she spills her feelings and facts to another cabined, cribbed and confined captive, her ex-teacher.
    • They have allowed these anti-Victorians to be cabined in Victorian stereotypes.

Origin

Middle English: from Old French cabane, from Provençal cabana, from late Latin capanna, cavanna.

  • cabinet from mid 16th century:

    The modern meaning of ‘a piece of furniture’ developed from the original sense ‘little cabin’ or ‘small room’. The use for the body of chief ministers who meet to discuss government policy dates from the 17th century. Confidential advisers of the monarch or chief ministers used to hold their meetings in a private room, and in time the term for the room was applied to the politicians themselves. Compare board

Rhymes

Scriabin

Definition of cabin in US English:

cabin

nounˈkabənˈkæbən
  • 1A private room or compartment on a ship.

    轮船舱室

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The captain takes us on a guided tour, and the ship's various cabins and state-rooms are laid open to us in cross-section.
    • Although pirates would search the ship's cabins for gold and silver, the main loot consisted of cargo such as grain, molasses, and kegs of rum.
    • Mid ship cabins are generally more expensive than those at the front or rear of the ship.
    • You are better off being prosperous and paying tax than going down in the first-class cabins of a sinking ship.
    • Flights from either Edinburgh or Glasgow to New York on October 29 are included, and you get a balcony cabin on board the ship.
    • They were each found in separate cabins, or compartments of the ship, for which a function could be determined by association with the artefacts found.
    • Therefore they rushed to the vessel and hoped to be transported timely, and were willing to be placed outside the cabins or on the ship's deck.
    • The large white ship has 435 cabins with a lower berth capacity of 700 passengers and a crew of about the same number.
    • The 44,200-tonne ship will have 148 cabins, 364 beds and travel at 22 knots.
    • The ship has cabins for all the crew, who are mostly Filipino or Syrian, and Pat often spends time on the ship.
    • It is possible to enter the cabins and engine room of this wreck, there is even a stove sitting in the galley.
    • The options are these: If you definitely want to be alone in a single cabin, first look for a ship that has single cabins.
    • There is over $5 million worth of original artwork on board the liner where four-out-of-five cabins feature private balconies.
    • In addition to the holds, the forecastle, bridge-island, engine room, and stern cabins offer the diver interesting places to explore.
    • With the view of the sea from your window, it's rather like being in a cabin on a cruise ship.
    • There were endless corridors, with doors leading to private cabins, and the occasional public space, such as a plunge pool.
    • The ‘ship’ is equipped with a bridge, crew's cabins and engine and lower deck compartments to make the training as authentic as possible.
    • Located where the ship's cabaret used to be, the cabins share a private deck area and hot tub just forward of the stem.
    • Most of them had stayed up through the night to help the injured and look for survivors, and most were now on board the ship in their cabins, exhausted and asleep.
    • Profits from the sale of the ship's cabins go to his foundation.
    Synonyms
    berth, stateroom, compartment, room, deckhouse, sleeping quarters
    compartment, passenger area, passenger accommodation
    cab, compartment
    1. 1.1 The area for passengers in an aircraft.
      飞机座舱,客舱
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Rapid travel in small aircraft cabins, and increased trade and commerce facilitate a lightning worldwide spread.
      • The shuttle jolted again, and an explosion ripped through the rear bulkhead of the passenger cabin.
      • As the door closed, he noticed one of the flight attendants watching him as she hurried toward the passenger cabin.
      • Chemical pesticides were routinely sprayed in passenger cabins on flights to the Caribbean, Latin America, and the South Pacific.
      • With the advent of pressurized cabins, the aircraft would be able to fly higher without the requisite oxygen aboard.
      • A definitive list of items now banned from aircraft cabins has been released and passengers are urged to comply with the new requirements.
      • Such attire is all right in its place, but not in the cramped, claustrophobic conditions of an aircraft cabin.
      • This might explain why someone working in a nightclub or aircraft cabin could be at a higher risk of catching the disease.
      • Customers can now take a virtual tour of the aircraft cabins, book flights, order special meals and duty-free items and look up jobs in the airline, online.
      • An aircraft cabin can be dehydrating, which can increase the risk of deep vein thrombosis.
      • Being born is like being tossed out of the luxurious first class cabin of a cruising aircraft.
      • Passengers entered the cabin through a doorway on the left side of the fuselage.
      • At the time, one could carry one's reed knife inside one's oboe case into the cabin of the aircraft.
      • The European Commission has drawn up a list of items to be banned from aircraft cabins.
      • Passengers on a Manchester bound flight from America wrestled a man to the floor after he allegedly went on a rampage in the cabin of the aircraft.
      • The heating and ventilating system served the pilots' compartment as well as the passenger cabin.
      • In the cabin of an aircraft, as all members know, it is quite confined, and it was not possible to crawl across the seats to get at the guy.
      • All passengers, regardless of their risk, should move around in their seats and in the aircraft cabin as much as possible during the journey.
      • Now we've added a new element of potential violence and brutality into the aircraft cabin.
      • Present international requirements allow the pressure in the cabins of these aircraft to be reduced to the equivalent of 8000 feet.
  • 2A small shelter or house, made of wood and situated in a wild or remote area.

    (荒野或偏僻地方的)小木屋;棚屋

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Five friends spend a holiday together in a remote cabin in the woods.
    • With winter approaching, we were happy to be housed in cabins rather than tents.
    • But much of England is densely populated and there could never been enough cabins and huts to house us all; our architectural sprawl needs some containment, a bit of planning.
    • Clustered around it are a choice of ecodwellings, including wooden cabins on stilts, clay huts with thatched roofs, large tepees and round tents sleeping one.
    • The banished will be flown to a second cabin on another remote island.
    • Could you not get a cheap flight to somewhere beachy, take off your shoes, find a wooden cabin and a man to cook you curry, for a fraction of the cost?
    • This cabin had a tree house, so I went up there to read for a bit and take a nap.
    • A group of people discover a book of the dead and unleash gore filled horror upon themselves in a remote cabin.
    • Summer campers are housed in cabins of twenty-five, each constructed to represent a different country - Korea, Japan, Russia.
    • Written almost entirely on the back porch of a remote cabin, the laid-back organic nature of the record is no surprise.
    • Wingdims will live in houses, huts, cabins, or any other shelter, they have a wonderful relationship with nature and everything around them.
    • For exterior coverings of houses, cabins, or other habitable structures, many organizations have used treated plywood.
    • But mostly shelter is house or cabin or tent - a wall between us and the other of the land around us.
    • Several walkways have been developed and cabins provided for shelter along the riverbanks and there is also a large hospitality cabin where lunches are served.
    • These wooden cabins evoke a rustic connection with American history and the beautiful natural environment.
    • People own, co-own or rent small, low-impact wooden cabins dotted all over the countryside.
    • There is suitably rustic accommodation around here - wooden lodges and cabins with utterly unspoiled views of lake and mountains.
    • The two-storey cabins have dark wooden interiors with wraparound walkways and a large front veranda.
    • It's ideal for remote vacation cabins with no electricity or areas prone to power outages.
    • My daughter liked to pod them each night at the wooden table in our cabin.
    Synonyms
    hut, log cabin, shanty, shack, shed
verbˈkabənˈkæbən
[with object]literary
  • Confine within narrow bounds.

    once loosed, the idea of equality is not easily cabined
    Example sentencesExamples
    • I need the salty sea air in my lungs to flush out the scent of that old man I was cabined with for so long.
    • They have allowed these anti-Victorians to be cabined in Victorian stereotypes.
    • Now she's an object of pity and scandal in Sydney society, and she spills her feelings and facts to another cabined, cribbed and confined captive, her ex-teacher.
    • But as that argument is narrow, and more easily cabined to just changes in terms, we expect, if we prevail, that's where the Court will decide it.
    • The complexity and multivalence of the receiving tradition prevent the information from being somehow, simply, walled off or cabined.

Origin

Middle English: from Old French cabane, from Provençal cabana, from late Latin capanna, cavanna.

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