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单词 ding
释义

ding1

verb dɪŋdɪŋ
[no object]
  • Make a ringing sound.

    发出丁当声

    cash registers were dinging softly

    现金出纳机发出轻微的丁当声。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • As he got into a comfortable sleeping position, his foot brushed against something that started dinging.
    • I was cleaning out my SPAM folder last night when the computer dinged and another email landed in the SPAM folder… asking for a dimensional generator.
    • When the green light above the elevator dinged quietly he flattened himself against the side of the wall closest to the elevator door and pushed Peaches forward so that she was doing the same.
    • Stick an egg-timer in front of him and when it dings, dinner is over.
    • My Super Duper Creep Detection Sense was dinging like crazy.
    • The continued the rest of the ride in silence and stepped out onto their drabby floor when the doors dinged open.
    • The microwave dinged again and Adam pulled out his lunch.
    • If I don't take the food out two minutes after the bell goes ‘ding’, it dings at me again, and louder!
    • The elevator dinged again and the doors opened.
    • The microwave dinged and Andy handed the plate to Cassidy.
    • Ding, ding, ding, The ring rang out across the school grounds and all the students raced to the door to get to their lockers first, along with Loan and Tobias.
    • My dinger is dinging, the pasta is ready so I part it from the water.
    • While it was baking I ran upstairs and worked until the timer dinged.
    • The elevator dinged and the doors slid open again, revealing a completely different world from the one they had left on the main floor of the hotel.
    • The button lit up, and something above them dinged.
    • The elevator dinged as it touched the ground, ‘Of course, how silly of me.’
    • The elevator dinged and once more the doors opened, ‘This way.’
    • The elevator dinged when he touched the ‘Down’ button.
    • As soon as the cash drawer dinged and slid out, the suspect reached into his waistband, pulled out a pistol, and screamed at the poor kid behind the counter to dump all the money in a bag, and do it fast!
    • The microwave dinged and Leon seemed to get a little shocked from the noise.
    Synonyms
    chime, ring out, chime out, toll, peal, knell
    ringing, chime, carillon, toll, tolling, peal, knell
exclamationdɪŋdɪŋ
  • Used to imitate a metallic ringing sound resembling a bell.

    “丁当!”(用来模仿如铃铛般的金属响声)

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Ding, ding - it was a pity her brother wasn't here to ring the bell.
    • ‘Ding ding ding, round two,’ he muttered, still bearing a grudge from the burns, and the being thrown into the seats.
    • Although one conductor only a few years ago on route 75 instead of pulling the cord twice just used to shout to the driver ‘ding ding!’
    • The Wicked Witch - ding, dong - isn't dead anymore.
    • ‘Ding, ding, ding, we have a winner’ she said with a coy smile.

Origin

Early 17th century: imitative.

Rhymes

Beijing, bing, bring, Chungking, cling, dingaling, fling, I Ching, king, Kunming, ling, Ming, Nanjing, Peking, ping, ring, sing, Singh, sling, spring, sting, string, swing, Synge, thing, ting, wing, wring, Xining, zing

ding2

noun dɪŋdɪŋ
North American informal
  • 1A mark or dent on the bodywork of a car, boat, or other vehicle.

    〈北美,非正式〉(车体、船体或其他交通工具上的)印痕;凹痕

    Example sentencesExamples
    • While you can bang out the dents and dings somewhat on the track, there will also be a certain amount of destruction to you vehicle that's just irreparable.
    • It had a few scrapes and dings on it, so I had to get those taken care of before it goes back to the dealership at the end of the lease in 5 days.
    • At the very end of the line I saw a woman with a little paint brush in hand examining each machine that came out of the inspection tower for any dings in the paint.
    • Damage modeling is limited to minor dings and bumps.
    • While you were drinking the coffee, the dealer's helpers were wetting down the merchandise, giving a false impression of good luster and camouflaging the dings.
    • It must be smooth, clean and free from cracks and dings.
    • Your nails will catch in scratches, dings and cracks that your fingertips won't feel.
    • It started as a little ding and the machine's constant vibration keeps making it worse.
    • The Stanley Cup has suffered dents and dings and, no doubt, it has been a witness to wondrous - and scandalous - things while being passed from hand to hand at bars and parties around the world.
    • Often they bounce around on a truck seat, or maybe ride in a saddle scabbard all day strapped to an unruly mustang, acquiring numerous dings and dents.
    • All right, so the question is, as this data continues to flow in, and engineers are assessing what sort of dings and dents might have occurred, many reporters are asking the question, how serious is it?
    • Does it show signs of obvious abuse, such as dents, dings, or heavy scratches?
    • Photographs show the shuttle's protective tiles has about 25 dings in it.
    • After a stealth aircraft flies, maintenance workers must recoat the skin, repairing the tiny dings and burrs that increase the craft's radar signature.
    • The four-ply seams won't tear or unravel, and the soft but tough 1-inch tie-downs won't put dings or scratches on your boat's hull.
    • And with the exception of a few dings and dents, it looks pretty much the way it did when it rolled off the line on July 11, 1960.
    • The report we got back was that there were 25 small dings.
    • You stop the dents and the dings in your own garage, but what about in the parking lot?
    • My car has a few scrapes and dings on it that I need to take care of in the next couple of months.
    • Additionally, there was no forearm to protect the tubular magazine from dents and dings.
    1. 1.1Scottish dialect A blow on the head.
      〈苏格兰或方〉(头上)一击
      Example sentencesExamples
      • I thought he was going to have another ding at Rob and his arms were everywhere.
verb dɪŋdɪŋ
[with object]
  • 1Dent (something).

    〈非正式,主北美〉使凹下

    Example sentencesExamples
    • It had dinged and dented spacecraft from day one, a maintenance headache, but not seen as a real threat.
    • The windshield of my old car got dinged by hail once, but that's it.
    • Right… Tell your Mom I'm sorry I dinged her car, again and yeah, sorry for being so rude earlier.
    • ‘They were dinged up a lot last year, and they were really good,’ says one SEC offensive coordinator.
    • A piece of concrete scratched one line officer, and a tiny fragment of lead from the 200 gr. bullet dinged the chin of an adjacent shooter.
    • Many would have thought that the Newspapers would have dropped their society diary author when he dinged his car against a lamp-post whilst leathered.
    • I was on lunch break one day when the guy who was filling in for me dinged a car in the parking lot and didn't tell anyone.
    • If you're not too careful, you can seriously ding your motherboard.
    • Also be careful not to ding the edge of the panel when nailing or handling.
    • And I haven't even dinged the car, which is probably one of the top five fears on my driving list.
    • Simon parked in the back of the parking lot, out where there weren't any other cars, taking up two spots so some little high school twit wouldn't ding his car.
    • Pausing only to drop my board and badly ding its nose, I returned to the car to find my friend lounging around.
    • Be careful when hammering the nails not to ding the wood as a scar may be the result.
    • Windshields and bumpers are no substitute for massive collisions or destructive impacts, although you'll swear these cars were only lightly dinged.
    • In addition, new boards loose considerable resale value after they are dinged or shattered a few times.
    • Bullet cases also get nicked and dinged by a gun, so examiners often scrutinize them, too.
    1. 1.1 Hit (someone), especially on the head.
      (尤指在头部)打击
      I dinged him one

      我在他头上打了一下。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • And if you've ever been surfing or body-surfing, you get hit, you get dinged as you're washed along on the shore.
      • And so you just ding the enemies to death, and they're dumb enough to let you do it.
      • Nothing spectacular but the Saints managed just two good runs over the middle of the line even though Martin was dinged in the third quarter.
      • The cornerbacks have been dinged and beaten badly on occasion.
      • ‘I wondered if I had gotten dinged, and maybe I wasn't thinking straight,’ he says.
      • All spent cases landed well away from the shooters, incidentally, and none came back to ding our foreheads as some of the mini .45s are prone to do.
      • If a receiver tips or deflects the ball and a player from the opposing team catches it, it's the quarterback who gets dinged while the receiver gets away unscathed.
      Synonyms
      hit over the head, hit on the head, hit, strike, buffet, bang, knock, thwack, slug, welt, cuff, punch, smash
    2. 1.2ding intoScottish no object Bump into.
      he dings into doorways like a bearing in a pinball machine

      他像弹球机的轴承一样撞向门口。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • So while mainstream media offered the sweeping panorama, video diaries took us where TV couldn't or wouldn't - running into air-raid shelters in the Israel-Hizballah war, crouching behind an armored vehicle with a soldier in Samarra, bullets dinging into metal off camera.
      • He let go from the hip as he reeled forward and the slug dinged into the trunk of the car two inches from my left leg.
      • So when she smashed into you, did your car ding into the car in front of you?

Origin

Middle English: probably of Scandinavian origin; compare with Danish dænge 'beat, bang'.

ding3

noun dɪŋdɪŋ
Australian informal
  • A lively party or celebration.

    〈澳,非正式〉气氛活跃的聚会(或庆典)

    Synonyms
    social gathering, gathering, social occasion, social event, social function, function, get-together, celebration, reunion, festivity, jamboree, reception, at-home, soirée, social

Origin

1950s: perhaps from ding-dong or wingding.

ding1

verbdiNGdɪŋ
[no object]
  • Make a ringing sound.

    发出丁当声

    cash registers were dinging softly

    现金出纳机发出轻微的丁当声。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Stick an egg-timer in front of him and when it dings, dinner is over.
    • When the green light above the elevator dinged quietly he flattened himself against the side of the wall closest to the elevator door and pushed Peaches forward so that she was doing the same.
    • As soon as the cash drawer dinged and slid out, the suspect reached into his waistband, pulled out a pistol, and screamed at the poor kid behind the counter to dump all the money in a bag, and do it fast!
    • The microwave dinged and Andy handed the plate to Cassidy.
    • My dinger is dinging, the pasta is ready so I part it from the water.
    • The microwave dinged again and Adam pulled out his lunch.
    • My Super Duper Creep Detection Sense was dinging like crazy.
    • The microwave dinged and Leon seemed to get a little shocked from the noise.
    • The continued the rest of the ride in silence and stepped out onto their drabby floor when the doors dinged open.
    • The elevator dinged and the doors slid open again, revealing a completely different world from the one they had left on the main floor of the hotel.
    • The elevator dinged as it touched the ground, ‘Of course, how silly of me.’
    • Ding, ding, ding, The ring rang out across the school grounds and all the students raced to the door to get to their lockers first, along with Loan and Tobias.
    • While it was baking I ran upstairs and worked until the timer dinged.
    • The elevator dinged and once more the doors opened, ‘This way.’
    • As he got into a comfortable sleeping position, his foot brushed against something that started dinging.
    • I was cleaning out my SPAM folder last night when the computer dinged and another email landed in the SPAM folder… asking for a dimensional generator.
    • The button lit up, and something above them dinged.
    • The elevator dinged when he touched the ‘Down’ button.
    • If I don't take the food out two minutes after the bell goes ‘ding’, it dings at me again, and louder!
    • The elevator dinged again and the doors opened.
    Synonyms
    chime, ring out, chime out, toll, peal, knell
    ringing, chime, carillon, toll, tolling, peal, knell
exclamationdiNGdɪŋ
  • Used to imitate a metallic ringing sound resembling a bell.

    “丁当!”(用来模仿如铃铛般的金属响声)

    Example sentencesExamples
    • ‘Ding ding ding, round two,’ he muttered, still bearing a grudge from the burns, and the being thrown into the seats.
    • Although one conductor only a few years ago on route 75 instead of pulling the cord twice just used to shout to the driver ‘ding ding!’
    • ‘Ding, ding, ding, we have a winner’ she said with a coy smile.
    • The Wicked Witch - ding, dong - isn't dead anymore.
    • Ding, ding - it was a pity her brother wasn't here to ring the bell.

Origin

Early 17th century: imitative.

ding2

noundɪŋdiNG
North American informal
  • A deliberate or accidental blow, especially a mark or dent on the bodywork of a car, boat, or other vehicle.

    〈北美,非正式〉(车体、船体或其他交通工具上的)印痕;凹痕

    Example sentencesExamples
    • All right, so the question is, as this data continues to flow in, and engineers are assessing what sort of dings and dents might have occurred, many reporters are asking the question, how serious is it?
    • Additionally, there was no forearm to protect the tubular magazine from dents and dings.
    • After a stealth aircraft flies, maintenance workers must recoat the skin, repairing the tiny dings and burrs that increase the craft's radar signature.
    • While you were drinking the coffee, the dealer's helpers were wetting down the merchandise, giving a false impression of good luster and camouflaging the dings.
    • It started as a little ding and the machine's constant vibration keeps making it worse.
    • Photographs show the shuttle's protective tiles has about 25 dings in it.
    • Often they bounce around on a truck seat, or maybe ride in a saddle scabbard all day strapped to an unruly mustang, acquiring numerous dings and dents.
    • It must be smooth, clean and free from cracks and dings.
    • At the very end of the line I saw a woman with a little paint brush in hand examining each machine that came out of the inspection tower for any dings in the paint.
    • The Stanley Cup has suffered dents and dings and, no doubt, it has been a witness to wondrous - and scandalous - things while being passed from hand to hand at bars and parties around the world.
    • And with the exception of a few dings and dents, it looks pretty much the way it did when it rolled off the line on July 11, 1960.
    • Damage modeling is limited to minor dings and bumps.
    • You stop the dents and the dings in your own garage, but what about in the parking lot?
    • Your nails will catch in scratches, dings and cracks that your fingertips won't feel.
    • The four-ply seams won't tear or unravel, and the soft but tough 1-inch tie-downs won't put dings or scratches on your boat's hull.
    • It had a few scrapes and dings on it, so I had to get those taken care of before it goes back to the dealership at the end of the lease in 5 days.
    • My car has a few scrapes and dings on it that I need to take care of in the next couple of months.
    • The report we got back was that there were 25 small dings.
    • Does it show signs of obvious abuse, such as dents, dings, or heavy scratches?
    • While you can bang out the dents and dings somewhat on the track, there will also be a certain amount of destruction to you vehicle that's just irreparable.
verbdɪŋdiNG
[with object]informal
  • 1Dent (something).

    〈非正式,主北美〉使凹下

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Many would have thought that the Newspapers would have dropped their society diary author when he dinged his car against a lamp-post whilst leathered.
    • Be careful when hammering the nails not to ding the wood as a scar may be the result.
    • If you're not too careful, you can seriously ding your motherboard.
    • In addition, new boards loose considerable resale value after they are dinged or shattered a few times.
    • And I haven't even dinged the car, which is probably one of the top five fears on my driving list.
    • Windshields and bumpers are no substitute for massive collisions or destructive impacts, although you'll swear these cars were only lightly dinged.
    • Pausing only to drop my board and badly ding its nose, I returned to the car to find my friend lounging around.
    • Simon parked in the back of the parking lot, out where there weren't any other cars, taking up two spots so some little high school twit wouldn't ding his car.
    • Also be careful not to ding the edge of the panel when nailing or handling.
    • A piece of concrete scratched one line officer, and a tiny fragment of lead from the 200 gr. bullet dinged the chin of an adjacent shooter.
    • Bullet cases also get nicked and dinged by a gun, so examiners often scrutinize them, too.
    • I was on lunch break one day when the guy who was filling in for me dinged a car in the parking lot and didn't tell anyone.
    • ‘They were dinged up a lot last year, and they were really good,’ says one SEC offensive coordinator.
    • Right… Tell your Mom I'm sorry I dinged her car, again and yeah, sorry for being so rude earlier.
    • The windshield of my old car got dinged by hail once, but that's it.
    • It had dinged and dented spacecraft from day one, a maintenance headache, but not seen as a real threat.
    1. 1.1 Hit (someone), especially on the head.
      (尤指在头部)打击
      I dinged him one

      我在他头上打了一下。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • All spent cases landed well away from the shooters, incidentally, and none came back to ding our foreheads as some of the mini .45s are prone to do.
      • And if you've ever been surfing or body-surfing, you get hit, you get dinged as you're washed along on the shore.
      • Nothing spectacular but the Saints managed just two good runs over the middle of the line even though Martin was dinged in the third quarter.
      • If a receiver tips or deflects the ball and a player from the opposing team catches it, it's the quarterback who gets dinged while the receiver gets away unscathed.
      • And so you just ding the enemies to death, and they're dumb enough to let you do it.
      • The cornerbacks have been dinged and beaten badly on occasion.
      • ‘I wondered if I had gotten dinged, and maybe I wasn't thinking straight,’ he says.
      Synonyms
      hit over the head, hit on the head, hit, strike, buffet, bang, knock, thwack, slug, welt, cuff, punch, smash
    2. 1.2US Criticize, injure, or penalize (someone)
      agents who stayed on a call too long got dinged
      Example sentencesExamples
      • As much as we got dinged in our Q3 sales, it ended up being a good thing in the long run.
      • Then we could tip them for doing the right thing, which they often do, vs. only dinging them when they screw up.
      • I'm sure exercise correlates with happiness, so why not ding activities that grow couch potatoes?
      • It is all so subjective; what one grader considers a good call last week could be dinged by another the next.
      • He dings him on a couple of different points.
      • So, not only do you get dinged for the default on the original account, you will have an additional negative report for the second or third account (as it gets resold) for the same debt!
      • Our format also has the dual purpose of knocking down a player like him, who doesn't get as much credit for his stolen bases and gets dinged for his lack of walks.
      • I got a few minors, and was amused to note that I'd been dinged both for being a bit hesitant and for not being hesitant enough at various points.
      • Essentially, he's gonna get dinged on his paycheck.
      • Despite a clean program, she received required elements marks as low as 5.1 after being dinged for improper technique on the lutz and flip jumps.
      • I think I did that in my first paper and got an A, so I'm loathe to change too much from my ‘winning formula’ but I don't want to get dinged for it.
      • I mean, I was on my way home from school, what were they going to ding me for?
      • If you live on a driveway-free street and have overnight guests with a car, they'll need a temporary permit or risk getting dinged with a fine.
      • Issuers who get dinged by credit-rating agencies see their bond prices fall.

Origin

Middle English: probably of Scandinavian origin; compare with Danish dænge ‘beat, bang’.

ding3

noundɪŋdiNG
Australian informal
  • A lively party or celebration.

    〈澳,非正式〉气氛活跃的聚会(或庆典)

    Synonyms
    social gathering, gathering, social occasion, social event, social function, function, get-together, celebration, reunion, festivity, jamboree, reception, at-home, soirée, social

Origin

1950s: perhaps from ding-dong or wingding.

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