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词汇 cul-de-sac
释义

Definition of cul-de-sac in English:

cul-de-sac

nounPlural culs-de-sac, Plural cul-de-sacs ˈkʌldəˌsakˈkʊldəˌsakˈkəldəˌsæk
  • 1A street or passage closed at one end.

    死胡同;尽头路

    Example sentencesExamples
    • People power has secured a public meeting to discuss plans to turn a Warminster street into a cul-de-sac.
    • And they know it's your car because they know you and they know you because your street is a cul-de-sac and strangers have little reason to walk through it.
    • Even working waste collection vehicles could not negotiate many back streets and cul-de-sacs for fear of losing their grip on the road while turning.
    • There was a fear that extra traffic from my students would decrease the safety of the cul-de-sac street.
    • The shop was in Churchill Road, a cul-de-sac right at the top of the High Street on the left hand side.
    • He said possible options for the road could include creating a cul-de-sac, building a bypass or introducing speed-restrictions and traffic calming measures.
    • He said a number of roads had speed humps in his ward, including tight streets and cul-de-sacs, many where there was no evidence of speeding or a history of accidents.
    • There would be basement parking for 90 cars with vehicular access from a new cul-de-sac off New Street.
    • She showers, changes clothes, then walks the dog around the development's maze of culs-de-sac and möbius streets.
    • A new road would provide access to traffic from High Road, with the cul-de-sac encircling 66 of the properties.
    • On the other side, in the city of New Haven, is the West Rock housing project: boarded-up buildings, litter-strewn cul-de-sacs, and dead-end roads.
    • Applications will only be considered for the closure of roads, which are ‘local distributors, cul-de-sacs or access-only streets’.
    • It changed the nature of suburban streets, with cul-de-sacs replacing straight streets as desirable places to reside and house design changing to incorporate carports or garages.
    • The project includes a cul-de-sac and two boulevard roadways.
    • The village streets and cul-de-sacs reminded me of a European village.
    • The new design should make it easier for the street cleansers to manoeuvre it around tight roads and into cul-de-sacs.
    • Interconnected streets and broad sidewalks rather than cul-de-sacs facilitate human movement through a neighborhood.
    • Housing groups within the development will be interconnected with an accessible street layout and long cul-de-sacs.
    • Although Winterscale Street is a cul-de-sac, highway officials admit they have no safety concerns which would warrant refusal.
    • He noted that the different housing groups within the area will be interconnected with an accessible street layout and long cul-de-sacs will be avoided.
    Synonyms
    no through road, blind alley, dead end
    1. 1.1 A route or course leading nowhere.
      〈喻〉绝境;僵局;死胡同
      was the new post a career cul-de-sac?

      这个新职务是否就是职业生涯的尽头呢?

      Example sentencesExamples
      • A good cast is led into a cul-de-sac of silliness.
      • How had I, and countless other well-meaning teachers and educational professionals, managed to spend three years marching down this terrible educational cul-de-sac?
      • The group is inventive and eclectic, never stopping in any cul-de-sac for too long.
      • While cyberspace may appear to be an ever-growing universe, it's likely to become a misleadingly impressive cul-de-sac.
      • Although he finds his career path stuck in a cul-de-sac, his fiery style of populist politics gives him the capacity to affect the direction of events in the run up to the general election.
      • So what is the way out of this cul-de-sac of unsatisfied feelings and frustration?
      • Anything short of persuading the union's rank and file would be a shortcut to a cul-de-sac; an arrangement at the top of the union that would amount to very little.
      • They were ultimately led by a man who was stuck in a political cul-de-sac as claustrophobic as the compound in which he was effectively imprisoned for the past two years.
      • They seemed to be stuck in a electoral cul-de-sac and appeared to be going nowhere.
      • Dissent is to be found elsewhere than in this self-referential cul-de-sac.
      • My genes have reached a biological cul-de-sac and they're going nowhere.
      • Given this policy cul-de-sac, how much further can the bubble be sustained?
      • More troubling are the forces that trap many of these workers in a career cul-de-sac.
      • A word to the wise: a policy to reintroduce traffic to the footstreets is a political cul-de-sac.
      • So after Thursday's departure, will he go down that tried-and - tested soap acting career cul-de-sac and release a rubbish single?
      • His anatomy of the human condition, however, is not the political and moral cul-de-sac it purports to be.
      • It was only when they realised they were in a political cul-de-sac that they changed approach.
      • Let's step away from this philosophical cul-de-sac.
      • There's no saying whether it would've taken them in a fruitful new direction or just led them into a cul-de-sac.
      • How could such euphoria and triumphalism end only two years later in the political cul-de-sac of voter apathy?
    2. 1.2Anatomy A vessel, tube, or sac open at only one end.
      〔剖〕盲管,陷凹
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The surgeon performed a physical examination and noted extreme tenderness in the posterior uterine cul-de-sac upon pelvic examination.
      • The inside of the appendix forms a cul-de-sac that usually opens into the large intestine.
      • It is the only skin-lined cul-de-sac in the human body.
      • It is performed by first drying the tear film, then inserting a Schirmer strip into the lower conjunctival cul-de-sac toward the temporal aspect of the lower lid.

Origin

Mid 18th century (originally in anatomy): French, literally 'bottom of a sack'.

Definition of cul-de-sac in US English:

cul-de-sac

nounˈkəldəˌsækˈkəldəˌsak
  • 1A street or passage closed at one end.

    死胡同;尽头路

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Even working waste collection vehicles could not negotiate many back streets and cul-de-sacs for fear of losing their grip on the road while turning.
    • He said a number of roads had speed humps in his ward, including tight streets and cul-de-sacs, many where there was no evidence of speeding or a history of accidents.
    • He noted that the different housing groups within the area will be interconnected with an accessible street layout and long cul-de-sacs will be avoided.
    • Although Winterscale Street is a cul-de-sac, highway officials admit they have no safety concerns which would warrant refusal.
    • The new design should make it easier for the street cleansers to manoeuvre it around tight roads and into cul-de-sacs.
    • There would be basement parking for 90 cars with vehicular access from a new cul-de-sac off New Street.
    • The shop was in Churchill Road, a cul-de-sac right at the top of the High Street on the left hand side.
    • On the other side, in the city of New Haven, is the West Rock housing project: boarded-up buildings, litter-strewn cul-de-sacs, and dead-end roads.
    • Applications will only be considered for the closure of roads, which are ‘local distributors, cul-de-sacs or access-only streets’.
    • The village streets and cul-de-sacs reminded me of a European village.
    • People power has secured a public meeting to discuss plans to turn a Warminster street into a cul-de-sac.
    • There was a fear that extra traffic from my students would decrease the safety of the cul-de-sac street.
    • And they know it's your car because they know you and they know you because your street is a cul-de-sac and strangers have little reason to walk through it.
    • She showers, changes clothes, then walks the dog around the development's maze of culs-de-sac and möbius streets.
    • A new road would provide access to traffic from High Road, with the cul-de-sac encircling 66 of the properties.
    • Interconnected streets and broad sidewalks rather than cul-de-sacs facilitate human movement through a neighborhood.
    • It changed the nature of suburban streets, with cul-de-sacs replacing straight streets as desirable places to reside and house design changing to incorporate carports or garages.
    • Housing groups within the development will be interconnected with an accessible street layout and long cul-de-sacs.
    • He said possible options for the road could include creating a cul-de-sac, building a bypass or introducing speed-restrictions and traffic calming measures.
    • The project includes a cul-de-sac and two boulevard roadways.
    Synonyms
    no through road, blind alley, dead end
    1. 1.1 A route or course leading nowhere.
      〈喻〉绝境;僵局;死胡同
      the pro-democracy forces found themselves in a political cul-de-sac
      Example sentencesExamples
      • More troubling are the forces that trap many of these workers in a career cul-de-sac.
      • How could such euphoria and triumphalism end only two years later in the political cul-de-sac of voter apathy?
      • They were ultimately led by a man who was stuck in a political cul-de-sac as claustrophobic as the compound in which he was effectively imprisoned for the past two years.
      • A good cast is led into a cul-de-sac of silliness.
      • They seemed to be stuck in a electoral cul-de-sac and appeared to be going nowhere.
      • My genes have reached a biological cul-de-sac and they're going nowhere.
      • How had I, and countless other well-meaning teachers and educational professionals, managed to spend three years marching down this terrible educational cul-de-sac?
      • A word to the wise: a policy to reintroduce traffic to the footstreets is a political cul-de-sac.
      • So after Thursday's departure, will he go down that tried-and - tested soap acting career cul-de-sac and release a rubbish single?
      • Let's step away from this philosophical cul-de-sac.
      • While cyberspace may appear to be an ever-growing universe, it's likely to become a misleadingly impressive cul-de-sac.
      • Given this policy cul-de-sac, how much further can the bubble be sustained?
      • Anything short of persuading the union's rank and file would be a shortcut to a cul-de-sac; an arrangement at the top of the union that would amount to very little.
      • So what is the way out of this cul-de-sac of unsatisfied feelings and frustration?
      • It was only when they realised they were in a political cul-de-sac that they changed approach.
      • Dissent is to be found elsewhere than in this self-referential cul-de-sac.
      • The group is inventive and eclectic, never stopping in any cul-de-sac for too long.
      • Although he finds his career path stuck in a cul-de-sac, his fiery style of populist politics gives him the capacity to affect the direction of events in the run up to the general election.
      • There's no saying whether it would've taken them in a fruitful new direction or just led them into a cul-de-sac.
      • His anatomy of the human condition, however, is not the political and moral cul-de-sac it purports to be.
    2. 1.2Anatomy A vessel, tube, or sac, e.g., the cecum, open at only one end.
      〔剖〕盲管,陷凹
      Example sentencesExamples
      • It is the only skin-lined cul-de-sac in the human body.
      • The surgeon performed a physical examination and noted extreme tenderness in the posterior uterine cul-de-sac upon pelvic examination.
      • The inside of the appendix forms a cul-de-sac that usually opens into the large intestine.
      • It is performed by first drying the tear film, then inserting a Schirmer strip into the lower conjunctival cul-de-sac toward the temporal aspect of the lower lid.

Origin

Mid 18th century (originally in anatomy): French, literally ‘bottom of a sack’.

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