单词 | pick up |
释义 | pick upWord family adjectivepickedpickynounpickednesspickerpickerypickingpicklockpick-me-uppickoffpickpocketpick Examples from the Corpus pick up• Do you want me to come back and pick you guys up?• He's hoping to pick up a few bargains at the sales.• I picked up a few words of Turkish when I was in Istanbul.• I picked up a stomach bug on holiday in Turkey.• Hi, I've come to pick up a suit I left on Tuesday.• I told Virginia I'd pick her up about 8:00.• I feel like I spend all my time picking up after the kids.• After the phone had rung twice, Joyce picked it up and said hello.• Brendan has a cold. He must have picked it up at school.• Financial commentators think we'll see the economy starting to pick up early next year.• Can you pick some milk up from the shop on your way home?• Come on Bob, pick up! I know you're there.• At present the hotel is almost empty, but I'm sure things will start to pick up in the spring.• I arranged to pick up Mr Clarke and take him to his accommodation.• "Where's Diana?" "She just left to pick up the kids from school."• Could you pick up the newspapers and magazines for me?• I'll pick up the tickets on my way home from work.• A lifeboat picked them up two miles from the coast.• Help me pick these things up. We have company coming.• It's just a little thing I picked up when I was in Kathmandu. pick yourself up• A team in such a position is likely to find it hard to pick itself up.• Shaken and deafened, I picked myself up.• I crashed to the ground, picked myself up, and began staggering around the car to the other side.• Carol picked herself up and dusted herself off.• He picked himself up and staggered down a corridor.• Think of the toddler learning to walk and how often he falls down only to pick himself up and try again.• Although he picked himself up and walked away, he knew something was wrong.• I fell, picked myself up, lurched forward another yard or two, then fell again.• However, Grimm was already picking himself up, swearing, dusting himself off, retrieving his cap. things are picking up• Well, things are picking up again. pick up speed/steam• Of course, good melody will sound fine at any tempo, so play slowly and gradually pick up speed.• The object thereupon begins to expand, and it will rapidly pick up speed.• The black-out protest is expected to pick up steam after the president signs the bill.• As they picked up speed along the main tarmac road it was already 3 a.m.• The coach picked up speed as it rattled and jolted down to Forty-second Street.• Indications the economy may be picking up steam hurt bonds by sparking concern inflation may accelerate, eroding bonds' fixed payments.• If the economy is picking up steam, the recovery may be nipped in the bud by renewed Fed tightening. pick up the bill/tab (for something)• After its shareholder equity turned negative last year, parent Dasa started picking up the bills.• But remember - raid your savings now and Santa won't pick up the bill.• Often, the book publisher, not the author, picks up the tab.• When the check comes, the lobbyists almost always pick up the tab.• In addition, my company will pick up the tab for all legal and moving expenses.• I wonder to myself as I pick up the tab for breakfast.• The company's picking up the bill for my trip to Hawaii.• There is a growing, often unstated, anticipation that the private sector will pick up the bill for public services.• Everything depended on contributors picking up the bill in ten, twenty or thirty years. pick up the pieces (of something)• It has already made behind-the-scenes preparations to share the job of picking up the pieces.• This hopefully will cause them a fixture congestion around April/May with us hopefully been able to pick up the pieces.• Whimper like a whipped puppy, Jay, have a drink and pick up the pieces.• The town is beginning to pick up the pieces after the worst mass shooting in U.S. history.• As proved by history, women are the ones who have to pick up the pieces in the aftermath of war.• Then the red mists cleared and she sank to her knees, picking up the pieces, moaning softly.• I picked up the pieces myself.• In her motherly concerned way, she was cosseting him as he tried to pick up the pieces of his life.• In the more stable area people were returning to pick up the pieces of their lives. pick up the threads (of something)• She gradually started to pick up the threads of her life.• The good thing is that he's trying to pick up the threads of his life again.• Enough to do picking up the threads of his own life. pick your feet up• Ronnie, stop shuffling and pick your feet up. Motor vehiclesˈpick-up noun 1. vehicle 交通工具 [countableC] especially American EnglishAmETTC a small truck with low sides that is used for carrying goods 小货车,皮卡货车 →5 see picture at 见图 truck1 2 improvement 改善 [countableC] an improvement in something which will be good for economic success 〔对经济有益的〕好转 pick-up in There are signs of a pick-up in high street spending. 商业区消费出现好转迹象。 3 collection 收取 [countableC, uncountableU] an occasion when someone or something is collected from a place 接人;取物 The price includes travel from your local pick-up point in the UK to your hotel in Paris. 这个价格包括从英国当地的上车点到巴黎酒店之间的旅费。 trash pick-up 垃圾收集 4. person 人 [countableC] informalSEX/HAVE SEX WITH a stranger that you meet in a bar, at a party etc and have sex with 〔在酒吧、聚会等中为发生性关系而〕偶然结识的人,勾搭到的人 5. music 音乐 [countableC] an electronic part on a musical instrument, especially an electric guitar, that makes the sound louder 〔乐器,尤指电吉他的〕拾音器 6 speed 速度 [uncountableU] American EnglishAmETTC the rate at which a vehicle can increase its speed 〔汽车的〕加速能力 SYN acceleration It was a small car, but it had good pick-up. 这车虽小,可加速能力很强。 Examples from the Corpus pick-up• Malls could be used more as a pick-up point for merchandise after orders are made online.• A sports car, a pick-up, a retro car?• Over the radio comes the call for a pick-up in the next street over.• a pick-up in textbook sales• I am not a bar pick-up kind of person, and I usually find the whole scene pretty cheesy.• a shuttle-bus pick-up• My old car had excellent pick-up.• Garbage pick-ups are on Tuesdays and Fridays.• Dad's old pick-up was parked outside.• The Waterbase brush has a special mix of synthetic filaments designed for optimum paint pick-up. pick-up point• Furthermore, it's all very well saying that there are 22 pick-up points but how do you get to them?• Malls could be used more as a pick-up point for merchandise after orders are made online.• But a car was seen slowing down at what might have been a pick-up point on the A12.• There was a horseshoe put-down and pick-up point between an ascending and descending ramp but parking there was prohibited.• Our house was less than a kilometre from the pick-up point.• Exact timings and location of your pick-up point will be forwarded to you with your travel documentation. From Longman Business Dictionary pick up phrasal verbphr v 1[intransitiveI] if business or trade picks up, it improves 2[transitiveT] pick something → up informal to buy something, especially for a low price Homes here can be picked up for as little as £30,000. 3pick up the bill/tab informal to pay for something, especially when it is not your responsibility to pay → pickThe contractors do not want to pick up the bill for problems which are not of their making. pick-upˈpick-up noun 1[countableC usually singular] an improvement or increase in a type of economic activity pick-up in There are signs of a pick-up in high street spending. 2 (also pick-up truck) [countableC] especially American EnglishAmE a small truck with low sides that is used for carrying goods 3[countableC, uncountableU] an occasion when someone or something is collected from a place A pick-up had been arranged for 5.30pm. Where’s the pick-up point? |
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