释义 |
Definition of boatload in English: boatloadnoun ˈbəʊtləʊdˈboʊtˌloʊd 1An amount of cargo or number of passengers which will fill a ship or boat. 船的装载量,一船 一船煤。 Example sentencesExamples - A runaway crocodile that has eluded capture in suburban Hong Kong for five months was spotted ‘sunbathing’ on traps laid out for it before being scared off by a boatload of photographers, reports said yesterday.
- At least five people drowned and many more are feared dead after a trawler attempting to ferry a boatload of illegal immigrants capsized Sunday in bad weather off the southern coast, police said Monday.
- Can you imagine a boatload of white Zimbabwean farmers being turned away?
- A boatload of refugees rescued from their sinking vessel at sea has finally been allowed to land, after a two week standoff.
- And there we were, sitting out on the deck, minding our own business when along came a boatload of environmentalists chanting slogans and waving pamphlets at us.
- At dinner, on the banks of this biblical river, we watch a boatload of teenagers rocking to hot rhythms, Algerian ‘rai’ music, I'm told.
- There was also a story on Friday of a boatload of people on Ashmore Reef in a leaky boat, who our navy had refused to pick up.
- I just don't get why so many people are so passionate in their support of his turning away a boatload of refugees.
- PORT St Johns has had enough of so-called anglers who come in, drop anchor in the Umzimvubu River for a couple of nights, catch everything they can and then head off home with a boatload of fish to sell.
- Today a boatload of cattle has left Ireland for Lebanon.
- This means that strong racers stuck with a boatload of rafting novices might be held up in their overall time, but organizers seemed to believe this minor idiosyncrasy added to the fun of the event.
- He is also charged with similar offences relating to a boatload of 147 refugees, who landed on Australia's Christmas Island on August 4, 2001.
- Ship of Fools, based on the Katherine Anne Porter novel about a boatload of vaguely doomed passengers in the 1930s, is pretty much a disaster.
- My first letter focused on a boatload of 14 refugees; conveniently neither Lynda nor Robin mentioned them.
- He expected to rub elbows with celebrities on the cruise but found he was the only celebrity on the good ship, Quaker City, among a boatload of pious Christians.
- A boatload of refugees has provoked a nervous reaction in Australia, but attitudes toward immigration may be shifting
- When a boatload of condoms arrived at the dock in Losuia as part of Papua New Guinea's national family planning program, the islanders blew them into balloons and sent them drifting out to sea.
- A boatload of nearly 4000 are on their way to Saudi Arabia
- We had completely lost track of this rationale by the time a boatload of them turned in July this year.
- And while I was there, we had a boatload of refugees coming from a town called Chilong, another town that was just literally wiped off the face of the Earth.
Synonyms cargo, freight, freightage, charge, burden - 1.1informal A large amount.
the Telecommunications Reform Act created a boatload of new regulations Example sentencesExamples - Reeves' Constantine is an entirely different character, a sardonic L.A. noir hero who lives alone in a gigantic loft with all his supernatural trickeries and a boatload of old-school Catholic guilt.
- Without these emergency-level interest rates, servicing this additional boatload of debt is no longer possible for ordinary consumers.
- Paint the tires black, dump a boatload of additives into the gas tank, raise the gas pedals a little… lots of cheap, quick fixes.
- The unions are spending a boatload of money to protect their paycheck deduction for dues and to fight against extending the time to get teacher tenure.
- For this year's romp through their back catalogue, they've rafted in a boatload of friends who don't have day jobs they shouldn't quit.
- I've written a boatload of opinions that remain more dubious than ever in the face of subsequent conventional wisdom - and I continue to believe almost every one.
- I just got a boatload of new possibilities for moving, and I am feeling distinctly hopeful again.
- The very word is laden with a boatload of meaning that unavoidably springs to mind when you say it.
- It's almost as though Ang Lee went back in time with a boatload of Hulk books and gave them to Sophocles to read and write a play about.
- As a C-section can lead to a boatload of blood loss, I had arranged to have extra blood on hand, donated by her village moments before the surgery.
- Have you taken a look at the boatload of new MPs to hit Ottawa recently?
- This adds a boatload of confusion to an environment that's already very confused.
- Into the frame chugs a boatload of Aborigines, dressed in army khakis, ‘discovery’ in their eyes.
- Niké Beltrán Luqman whipped up a boatload of tapas from her native Spain recently for the farewell afternoon she hosted at her home in honor of Dr. Charles Smith and Richard Morgan.
- North Carolina's boatload of elite prospects might form a championship team.
- We're now up to 45 teachers, and a boatload of ratings.
- Boaters who have run out of electronic gizmos to stuff in Christmas stockings have a boatload of nautical books to fill the gap this year.
- He's facing a boatload of ugly challenges and dilemmas.
- An image eventually begins to appear (based on a boatload of research and an eon of enforced intuitive reflection).
- Lyle and Erik went out and spent a boatload of money after the murders, and this sort of cast suspicion on them immediately.
- Each summer, the company invites a boatload of bright young apprentice singers, all hoping for some quality stage experience.
- However, I know from hallway conversation that there's a boatload of Open Source technology worth reading.
- At one point later on, I'm crossing the famous Skinny Bridge just as it's being raised for a boatload of partiers.
- Hey, and one thing I have had a boatload of is the over the top colour scheming in this show.
- But presumably you did this because you knew this boatload of people was on its way, is that correct?
Definition of boatload in US English: boatloadnounˈboʊtˌloʊdˈbōtˌlōd 1A number of passengers or amount of cargo that will fill a ship or boat. 船的装载量,一船 一船煤。 Example sentencesExamples - And while I was there, we had a boatload of refugees coming from a town called Chilong, another town that was just literally wiped off the face of the Earth.
- A boatload of refugees has provoked a nervous reaction in Australia, but attitudes toward immigration may be shifting
- He expected to rub elbows with celebrities on the cruise but found he was the only celebrity on the good ship, Quaker City, among a boatload of pious Christians.
- Today a boatload of cattle has left Ireland for Lebanon.
- A boatload of nearly 4000 are on their way to Saudi Arabia
- This means that strong racers stuck with a boatload of rafting novices might be held up in their overall time, but organizers seemed to believe this minor idiosyncrasy added to the fun of the event.
- Ship of Fools, based on the Katherine Anne Porter novel about a boatload of vaguely doomed passengers in the 1930s, is pretty much a disaster.
- At least five people drowned and many more are feared dead after a trawler attempting to ferry a boatload of illegal immigrants capsized Sunday in bad weather off the southern coast, police said Monday.
- My first letter focused on a boatload of 14 refugees; conveniently neither Lynda nor Robin mentioned them.
- We had completely lost track of this rationale by the time a boatload of them turned in July this year.
- There was also a story on Friday of a boatload of people on Ashmore Reef in a leaky boat, who our navy had refused to pick up.
- Can you imagine a boatload of white Zimbabwean farmers being turned away?
- A runaway crocodile that has eluded capture in suburban Hong Kong for five months was spotted ‘sunbathing’ on traps laid out for it before being scared off by a boatload of photographers, reports said yesterday.
- When a boatload of condoms arrived at the dock in Losuia as part of Papua New Guinea's national family planning program, the islanders blew them into balloons and sent them drifting out to sea.
- PORT St Johns has had enough of so-called anglers who come in, drop anchor in the Umzimvubu River for a couple of nights, catch everything they can and then head off home with a boatload of fish to sell.
- A boatload of refugees rescued from their sinking vessel at sea has finally been allowed to land, after a two week standoff.
- He is also charged with similar offences relating to a boatload of 147 refugees, who landed on Australia's Christmas Island on August 4, 2001.
- I just don't get why so many people are so passionate in their support of his turning away a boatload of refugees.
- And there we were, sitting out on the deck, minding our own business when along came a boatload of environmentalists chanting slogans and waving pamphlets at us.
- At dinner, on the banks of this biblical river, we watch a boatload of teenagers rocking to hot rhythms, Algerian ‘rai’ music, I'm told.
Synonyms cargo, freight, freightage, charge, burden - 1.1informal A large amount.
a boatload of new regulations the festival brought together a boatload of guitarists from all corners of the world Example sentencesExamples - Without these emergency-level interest rates, servicing this additional boatload of debt is no longer possible for ordinary consumers.
- Paint the tires black, dump a boatload of additives into the gas tank, raise the gas pedals a little… lots of cheap, quick fixes.
- But presumably you did this because you knew this boatload of people was on its way, is that correct?
- As a C-section can lead to a boatload of blood loss, I had arranged to have extra blood on hand, donated by her village moments before the surgery.
- Hey, and one thing I have had a boatload of is the over the top colour scheming in this show.
- I just got a boatload of new possibilities for moving, and I am feeling distinctly hopeful again.
- Each summer, the company invites a boatload of bright young apprentice singers, all hoping for some quality stage experience.
- At one point later on, I'm crossing the famous Skinny Bridge just as it's being raised for a boatload of partiers.
- The unions are spending a boatload of money to protect their paycheck deduction for dues and to fight against extending the time to get teacher tenure.
- For this year's romp through their back catalogue, they've rafted in a boatload of friends who don't have day jobs they shouldn't quit.
- This adds a boatload of confusion to an environment that's already very confused.
- The very word is laden with a boatload of meaning that unavoidably springs to mind when you say it.
- An image eventually begins to appear (based on a boatload of research and an eon of enforced intuitive reflection).
- However, I know from hallway conversation that there's a boatload of Open Source technology worth reading.
- Lyle and Erik went out and spent a boatload of money after the murders, and this sort of cast suspicion on them immediately.
- We're now up to 45 teachers, and a boatload of ratings.
- He's facing a boatload of ugly challenges and dilemmas.
- It's almost as though Ang Lee went back in time with a boatload of Hulk books and gave them to Sophocles to read and write a play about.
- Into the frame chugs a boatload of Aborigines, dressed in army khakis, ‘discovery’ in their eyes.
- North Carolina's boatload of elite prospects might form a championship team.
- Have you taken a look at the boatload of new MPs to hit Ottawa recently?
- I've written a boatload of opinions that remain more dubious than ever in the face of subsequent conventional wisdom - and I continue to believe almost every one.
- Boaters who have run out of electronic gizmos to stuff in Christmas stockings have a boatload of nautical books to fill the gap this year.
- Niké Beltrán Luqman whipped up a boatload of tapas from her native Spain recently for the farewell afternoon she hosted at her home in honor of Dr. Charles Smith and Richard Morgan.
- Reeves' Constantine is an entirely different character, a sardonic L.A. noir hero who lives alone in a gigantic loft with all his supernatural trickeries and a boatload of old-school Catholic guilt.
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