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单词 unaccompanied
释义

Definition of unaccompanied in English:

unaccompanied

adjectiveʌnəˈkʌmpənɪdˌənəˈkəmp(ə)nid
  • 1Having no companion or escort.

    无伴侣的;无陪伴的,无伴随的

    no unaccompanied children allowed

    严禁儿童单独入内。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The inspector is allowed to make unaccompanied visits to the site to assist in his findings.
    • He finds her a cab and allows her to proceed unaccompanied to her unnamed destination.
    • The handlers believe that unaccompanied baggage should be dealt with by the federal police or appropriately trained security personnel.
    • Officials comparing luggage and passenger lists believed there was unaccompanied baggage aboard the plane, but a search found nothing suspicious.
    • He warned parents that they could be prosecuted for ‘aiding and abetting’ if they allowed their youngsters drive unaccompanied, particularly at weekends.
    • The group also rejected calls to have all checked baggage screened and ensure unaccompanied baggage is not loaded on to planes by mistake, according to a draft report published in USA Today newspaper.
    • And they weren't even allowed to visit the bathroom unaccompanied.
    • Almost three out of four drivers on Irish roads believe that untested drivers should NOT be allowed to drive unaccompanied, a major RAC survey has revealed.
    • Isn't it supposed to be a major violation of security for unaccompanied baggage to travel on a flight.
    • Most carriers also impose surcharges for excess baggage, unaccompanied minors, paper tickets and changes to flights.
    • In New Caledonia the law allowed the recruitment of unaccompanied children over the age of six, with the consent of a guardian, and in 1884 the age limit was set at ten.
    • And that licence allows them to pick up vulnerable people, including lone women and unaccompanied children.
    • According to SAA procedures, staff are supposed to escort unaccompanied minors off the plane and make sure that they are signed out by the person designated to fetch them.
    • It was a faltering start, but still an important moment for the women who just seven days ago could not leave the house unaccompanied, let alone show their faces.
    • If someone looks as though they may be younger than that, they will be required to produce ID before being allowed in unaccompanied.
    • Near the start of my test I paused expertly to allow an unaccompanied dog to walk across the road in front of me at a zebra crossing.
    • Kids were allowed in bottle stores unaccompanied back then, and my first crush would take me to the local and buy me K-bars.
    • Two thirds of the US homeless population consists of families with children or single women and unaccompanied youth.
    • The organisers are also appealing to parents to turn up on the day, as young children will not be allowed entry unaccompanied.
    • Each is monitored by Delta staff who supervise the facility, trackflight status and escort unaccompanied minors to and from their flights.
    Synonyms
    alone, on one's own, all alone, by oneself, solo, lone, solitary, single, single-handed
    unescorted, without an escort, unattended, unchaperoned, partnerless, companionless
    Latin solus
    informal by one's lonesome
    British informal on one's tod, on one's lonesome, on one's jack, on one's Jack Jones
    Australian/New Zealand informal on one's pat, on one's Pat Malone
  • 2Taking place without something specified taking place at the same time.

    (状态、局面或事件)无伴随的

    the political change was unaccompanied by social change

    政治变革没有引起社会变化。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The increase in weight unaccompanied by a similar increase in strength results in slower swims as well as increased body stress, particularly in the weaker muscles.
    • Basilar artery (BA) aplasia when unaccompanied by a primitive carotid- vertebrobasilar anastomosis is exceedingly rare.
    • They can also lead to wasted taxpayer dollars when unaccompanied by adequate social services and anti-drug covenants.
    • The wording of section 3 seems to allow a simple change of mind, unaccompanied by any overt act, to constitute appropriation.
    • There is a likelihood of rapidly increasing surface temperatures unaccompanied by strong warming in the free troposphere.
    • It is further strained when training for the next tour, unaccompanied school assignments and temporary duty travel increase the separation of a soldier and his family.
    • But, in the upper part of the vertebral column, there may be a dislocation of the vertebrae unaccompanied by a fracture.
    • Estrogen induces estrus unaccompanied by a preovulatory surge in luteinizing hormone in suckled sows.
    • A social model that is under pressure now, but a social model where you can say that economic development cannot be unaccompanied by social development.
    • By the mid-1970s, no Vatican pronouncement on social issues went unaccompanied by dire threats against the ‘church of the poor’.
    • Increases in GNP were unaccompanied by infrastructural development.
  • 3(of a piece of music) sung or played without instrumental accompaniment.

    (音乐)无伴奏的

    an unaccompanied violin elegy
    they sang unaccompanied

    他们在没有伴奏的情况下演唱。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • In the village church last night, a packed house enjoyed a stunning concert of unaccompanied choral music from the Soloists Of Saint Petersburg, who are currently in the middle of a two month tour round the UK.
    • In days of yore the church did not allow music to be performed with instruments; hence music in the chapel became associated with vocal music unaccompanied by any instrument.
    • Through the wall he was continually listening to the Bach G minor unaccompanied violin sonata.
    • Bach is believed to have commenced writing the Sonatas and Partitas for unaccompanied violin shortly thereafter.
    • Rosand opened the program with Johann Sebastian Bach's Adagio in G minor (for unaccompanied violin) - a truly spiritual experience.
    • Originally this kind of traditional singing was sung unaccompanied and was melodic.
    • Here Yugoslavian-born piano star Bojan Z, frequently an unaccompanied solo player, joins what looks on paper like a conventional jazz trio, with Scott Colley on bass and Nasheet Waits on drums.
    • Berlioz wrote a severe test of tuning for unaccompanied choir in the final ‘mystical chorus’, and here the Elysian singers came up trumps.
    • The unaccompanied choir responds to the sincerity of the music with impeccable ensemble and intonation.
    • This opens strikingly with the high voices singing unaccompanied in unison.
    • Open to singers aged sixteen and over both from the UK and overseas, the course aims to develop excellence in unaccompanied choral singing, focusing especially on Renaissance music.
    • However, we were still left without an organ to play for the service. As luck would have it, it's Lent anyway, so a lot of the music is unaccompanied.
    • It was a vocal work, accompanied or unaccompanied, in which a secular text was sung by a number of voices.
    • The team of five local singers under the direction of composer Celia Harper, perform unaccompanied choral harmonies embracing music from the 16th to the 21st Century and regularly appear at St Michael's.
    • The choir have been singing together for the past ten years and are experienced in both accompanied and unaccompanied four-part singing.
    • The action is interspersed and moved along by A Cappella songs, beautifully sung, for the most part unaccompanied, by the company on a bare stage.
    • This disc contains his complete works for unaccompanied violin and viola, and also his complete published works for those instruments accompanied.
    • They are included among the 11 tracks, all sung outstandingly well by the 26-piece unaccompanied Estonian Philharmonic Choir, directed by the Paul Hillier.
    • This leads us back to the genetic purity Mr. Duffy so rightly calls for; slow airs and slip jigs sung unaccompanied or accompanied by the harp.
    • In the Codax songs, this is not helped by the fact that all seven are sung entirely unaccompanied.

Definition of unaccompanied in US English:

unaccompanied

adjectiveˌənəˈkəmp(ə)nēdˌənəˈkəmp(ə)nid
  • 1Having no companion or escort.

    无伴侣的;无陪伴的,无伴随的

    no unaccompanied children allowed

    严禁儿童单独入内。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • In New Caledonia the law allowed the recruitment of unaccompanied children over the age of six, with the consent of a guardian, and in 1884 the age limit was set at ten.
    • Near the start of my test I paused expertly to allow an unaccompanied dog to walk across the road in front of me at a zebra crossing.
    • Almost three out of four drivers on Irish roads believe that untested drivers should NOT be allowed to drive unaccompanied, a major RAC survey has revealed.
    • According to SAA procedures, staff are supposed to escort unaccompanied minors off the plane and make sure that they are signed out by the person designated to fetch them.
    • Each is monitored by Delta staff who supervise the facility, trackflight status and escort unaccompanied minors to and from their flights.
    • The organisers are also appealing to parents to turn up on the day, as young children will not be allowed entry unaccompanied.
    • He warned parents that they could be prosecuted for ‘aiding and abetting’ if they allowed their youngsters drive unaccompanied, particularly at weekends.
    • Most carriers also impose surcharges for excess baggage, unaccompanied minors, paper tickets and changes to flights.
    • The handlers believe that unaccompanied baggage should be dealt with by the federal police or appropriately trained security personnel.
    • He finds her a cab and allows her to proceed unaccompanied to her unnamed destination.
    • If someone looks as though they may be younger than that, they will be required to produce ID before being allowed in unaccompanied.
    • It was a faltering start, but still an important moment for the women who just seven days ago could not leave the house unaccompanied, let alone show their faces.
    • Kids were allowed in bottle stores unaccompanied back then, and my first crush would take me to the local and buy me K-bars.
    • And they weren't even allowed to visit the bathroom unaccompanied.
    • The inspector is allowed to make unaccompanied visits to the site to assist in his findings.
    • Two thirds of the US homeless population consists of families with children or single women and unaccompanied youth.
    • Officials comparing luggage and passenger lists believed there was unaccompanied baggage aboard the plane, but a search found nothing suspicious.
    • And that licence allows them to pick up vulnerable people, including lone women and unaccompanied children.
    • The group also rejected calls to have all checked baggage screened and ensure unaccompanied baggage is not loaded on to planes by mistake, according to a draft report published in USA Today newspaper.
    • Isn't it supposed to be a major violation of security for unaccompanied baggage to travel on a flight.
    Synonyms
    alone, on one's own, all alone, by oneself, solo, lone, solitary, single, single-handed
    1. 1.1 (of a piece of music) sung or played without instrumental accompaniment.
      (音乐)无伴奏的
      an unaccompanied violin elegy
      Example sentencesExamples
      • In the village church last night, a packed house enjoyed a stunning concert of unaccompanied choral music from the Soloists Of Saint Petersburg, who are currently in the middle of a two month tour round the UK.
      • Rosand opened the program with Johann Sebastian Bach's Adagio in G minor (for unaccompanied violin) - a truly spiritual experience.
      • This disc contains his complete works for unaccompanied violin and viola, and also his complete published works for those instruments accompanied.
      • Bach is believed to have commenced writing the Sonatas and Partitas for unaccompanied violin shortly thereafter.
      • The unaccompanied choir responds to the sincerity of the music with impeccable ensemble and intonation.
      • The choir have been singing together for the past ten years and are experienced in both accompanied and unaccompanied four-part singing.
      • The action is interspersed and moved along by A Cappella songs, beautifully sung, for the most part unaccompanied, by the company on a bare stage.
      • They are included among the 11 tracks, all sung outstandingly well by the 26-piece unaccompanied Estonian Philharmonic Choir, directed by the Paul Hillier.
      • Through the wall he was continually listening to the Bach G minor unaccompanied violin sonata.
      • In the Codax songs, this is not helped by the fact that all seven are sung entirely unaccompanied.
      • The team of five local singers under the direction of composer Celia Harper, perform unaccompanied choral harmonies embracing music from the 16th to the 21st Century and regularly appear at St Michael's.
      • Open to singers aged sixteen and over both from the UK and overseas, the course aims to develop excellence in unaccompanied choral singing, focusing especially on Renaissance music.
      • This opens strikingly with the high voices singing unaccompanied in unison.
      • However, we were still left without an organ to play for the service. As luck would have it, it's Lent anyway, so a lot of the music is unaccompanied.
      • Here Yugoslavian-born piano star Bojan Z, frequently an unaccompanied solo player, joins what looks on paper like a conventional jazz trio, with Scott Colley on bass and Nasheet Waits on drums.
      • Originally this kind of traditional singing was sung unaccompanied and was melodic.
      • It was a vocal work, accompanied or unaccompanied, in which a secular text was sung by a number of voices.
      • Berlioz wrote a severe test of tuning for unaccompanied choir in the final ‘mystical chorus’, and here the Elysian singers came up trumps.
      • This leads us back to the genetic purity Mr. Duffy so rightly calls for; slow airs and slip jigs sung unaccompanied or accompanied by the harp.
      • In days of yore the church did not allow music to be performed with instruments; hence music in the chapel became associated with vocal music unaccompanied by any instrument.
    2. 1.2 (of a state, condition, or event) taking place without something specified taking place at the same time.
      (状态、局面或事件)无伴随的
      the political change was unaccompanied by social change

      政治变革没有引起社会变化。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • It is further strained when training for the next tour, unaccompanied school assignments and temporary duty travel increase the separation of a soldier and his family.
      • A social model that is under pressure now, but a social model where you can say that economic development cannot be unaccompanied by social development.
      • Increases in GNP were unaccompanied by infrastructural development.
      • But, in the upper part of the vertebral column, there may be a dislocation of the vertebrae unaccompanied by a fracture.
      • Basilar artery (BA) aplasia when unaccompanied by a primitive carotid- vertebrobasilar anastomosis is exceedingly rare.
      • Estrogen induces estrus unaccompanied by a preovulatory surge in luteinizing hormone in suckled sows.
      • There is a likelihood of rapidly increasing surface temperatures unaccompanied by strong warming in the free troposphere.
      • By the mid-1970s, no Vatican pronouncement on social issues went unaccompanied by dire threats against the ‘church of the poor’.
      • The wording of section 3 seems to allow a simple change of mind, unaccompanied by any overt act, to constitute appropriation.
      • They can also lead to wasted taxpayer dollars when unaccompanied by adequate social services and anti-drug covenants.
      • The increase in weight unaccompanied by a similar increase in strength results in slower swims as well as increased body stress, particularly in the weaker muscles.
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更新时间:2024/9/19 9:37:08