anchor

英[ˈæŋkə(r)]
美[ˈæŋkər]

基本释义

n.
锚; 支柱,靠山; 节目主持人
v.
抛锚,使停泊; 使固定,扎根; 主持

词性变化

实用例句

We weighed anchor (= pulled it out of the water) .

我们起锚启航。

牛津词典

the anchor of the family

全家的顶梁柱

牛津词典

We anchored off the coast of Spain.

我们在西班牙沿海抛锚停泊。

牛津词典

Make sure the table is securely anchored.

务必要把桌子固定好。

牛津词典

Her novels are anchored in everyday experience.

她的小说取材自日常生活经验。

牛津词典

She anchored the evening news for seven years.

她主持了七年晚间新闻报道。

牛津词典

to drop anchor

抛锚

牛津词典

The ship lay at anchor two miles off the rocky coast.

船在离岩岸两英里处抛锚停泊。

牛津词典

We could anchor off the pier...

我们可以在码头附近下锚停泊。

They anchored the boat.

他们抛锚停船。

The roots anchor the plant in the earth...

根部使植物固定在土壤中。

The child seat belt was not properly anchored to the car.

儿童坐椅的安全带并未在车上固定到位。

He provided an emotional anchor for her...

他是她的精神支柱。

He remains the anchor of the country's fragile political balance.

他仍然是维系该国脆弱的政治平衡的支柱。

A united Germany must be firmly anchored in NATO if Europe is to remain stable...

欧洲要保持稳定,德国必须统一并固守北约。

His basic outlook remains anchored in the liberal tradition.

他的基本观念依旧扎根于自由主义传统。

Viewers saw him anchoring a five-minute summary of regional news.

观众看见他主持一个5分钟的地方新闻摘要节目。

...a series of cassettes on the Vietnam War, anchored by Mr. Cronkite.

克朗凯特先生主持的关于越南战争的系列节目录像带

He worked in the news division of ABC — he was the anchor of its 15-minute evening newscast.

他在美国广播公司的新闻部工作——他是晚间15分钟新闻播报的主持人。

Sailing boats lay at anchor in the narrow waterway.

帆船停泊在狭窄的水道上。

We dropped anchor in a sheltered spot.

我们在一个能够遮风挡雨的地方下了锚。

Swaps the anchor and end points of the current selection.

交换当前所选内容的定位点和结束点.

期刊摘选

真题例句

My anchor must put the brakes on my traveling plans.

出自-2012年12月听力原文

Unlike floating ice shelves which have little impact on sea level when they break up, the ice sheet is anchored to bedrock will blow the sea surface.

出自-2010年12月听力原文

My next work was to construct a nest and anchor it in a tree.

2017年高考英语全国卷1 阅读理解 阅读B 原文

英英释义

Noun
  • 1. a mechanical device that prevents a vessel from moving

  • 2. a central cohesive source of support and stability;

    "faith is his anchor"

    "the keystone of campaign reform was the ban on soft money"

    "he is the linchpin of this firm"

  • 3. a television reporter who coordinates a broadcast to which several correspondents contribute

Verb
  • 1. fix firmly and stably;

    "anchor the lamppost in concrete"

  • 2. secure a vessel with an anchor;

    "We anchored at Baltimore"