释义 |
Definition of sweet spot in English: sweet spotnoun informal 1The point or area on a bat, club, or racket at which it makes most effective contact with the ball. 〈非正式〉(球棒或球拍上的)最有效击球点 a bigger sweet spot forgives off-centre hits Example sentencesExamples - To see if you're hitting the ball on the sweet spot, sprinkle baby powder on the clubface before hitting a shot.
- Hitters growing up swinging aluminum bats have a greater degree of error when they switch to wood because of the smaller sweet spot on a wooden bat.
- The ball, struck solidly on the very sweet spot of the club, traveled straight to the flag with a matchless trajectory.
- High school and college hitters who use aluminum bats often develop longer, less efficient swings because the bats' larger sweet spots give them greater margin for error.
- He says the cold weather also helps because it makes him concentrate on hitting the ball on the sweet spot of the bat.
- Time it correctly, and you'll hit the sweet spot of the ball, launching it farther down the course.
- The more often you hit the ball on the sweet spot of the club, the better your shots will be.
- There's something about the feel of being positioned well and having the ball hit the sweet spot and then arc perfectly over the net past my opponent.
- Hernandez's strength allows him to muscle shots even when he doesn't put the bat's sweet spot on the ball.
- For the St. Louis Cardinal slugger, the sweet spot is a fast ball pitched to the lower-right corner of the strike zone.
- The research has concentrated on increasing the all-important sweet spot, the area where the batsmen experiences least impact when the ball is struck.
- It would have been a peach if he'd hit the sweet spot.
- Tennis-elbow-addled fans admired stars like Borg and McEnroe because they knew how tough it was to hit accurate, firm strokes with wooden rackets with tiny sweet spots.
- These are not alarming issues, but Henson aims the ball some and doesn't always put it in the sweet spot.
- A sinker is harder to get just the right contact on the sweet spot.
- From the ensuing free-kick, Cristiano Ronaldo hits the sweet spot and brings a smart save out of Blazek, who can only parry his effort.
- Cue balls also have sweet spots that radiate outward from the center.
- From beginner to tour professional, the aim is the same: hit the ball on the sweet spot in the middle of the clubface.
- The sensation is great when you hit the sweet spot and you do have better control and feedback.
- I can hit the ball a little off the sweet spot and put one out of the park.
- 1.1 An optimum point or combination of factors or qualities.
the market may have reached its sweet spot, with prices high enough to encourage sellers but still low enough to promise a good return Example sentencesExamples - That puts Juniper, with its focus on telecoms, in the sweet spot for revenue growth.
- Scott believes he has found the Japanese market's sweet spot - and, in the last quarter, it was hard to doubt him.
- We're reaching the point in the cycle that marks the sweet spot for the equity market.
- He is in a very sweet spot as consumer brands and entertainment continue to converge.
- The stock market celebrates being in a "sweet spot" of solid growth and stable low interest rates.
- His job is to find the sweet spot between the creative and the financial sides.
- The economy is in a sweet spot that should keep inflation at bay for some time.
- Various studies have been conducted, but the "sweet spot" seems to be around eight to 15 hedge funds.
- The $2 billion outfit's "sweet spot," he says, is people with a net worth closer to $1 million than $1 billion.
- Indeed, chances are traditional agencies and interactive shops will continue to resemble each other as each tries to find the sweet spot in the digital economy.
- Growth has settled into the 2 % to 3 % range that many experts consider the country's sweet spot.
- This month's issue will help you identify financial warning signs and the sweet spots in this sour economy.
- After basking in a sweet spot for quite a while, the banks may be headed for a rough patch.
- The sweet spot, it turned out, was in harnessing the technology they had created to help other doctors run their practices.
- Auctioneer Richard Estes sees three sweet spots with appeal to different audiences.
- While the market for non-chocolate candy has reached relative maturity, sweet spots in the industry still burst with opportunity.
- The trick for execs is finding that sweet spot between fighting new technologies and pushing into digital delivery.
Definition of sweet spot in US English: sweet spotnounswit spɑt informal 1The point or area on a bat, club, or racket at which it makes most effective contact with the ball. 〈非正式〉(球棒或球拍上的)最有效击球点 Example sentencesExamples - It would have been a peach if he'd hit the sweet spot.
- The research has concentrated on increasing the all-important sweet spot, the area where the batsmen experiences least impact when the ball is struck.
- I can hit the ball a little off the sweet spot and put one out of the park.
- The more often you hit the ball on the sweet spot of the club, the better your shots will be.
- These are not alarming issues, but Henson aims the ball some and doesn't always put it in the sweet spot.
- From the ensuing free-kick, Cristiano Ronaldo hits the sweet spot and brings a smart save out of Blazek, who can only parry his effort.
- The ball, struck solidly on the very sweet spot of the club, traveled straight to the flag with a matchless trajectory.
- He says the cold weather also helps because it makes him concentrate on hitting the ball on the sweet spot of the bat.
- There's something about the feel of being positioned well and having the ball hit the sweet spot and then arc perfectly over the net past my opponent.
- For the St. Louis Cardinal slugger, the sweet spot is a fast ball pitched to the lower-right corner of the strike zone.
- A sinker is harder to get just the right contact on the sweet spot.
- To see if you're hitting the ball on the sweet spot, sprinkle baby powder on the clubface before hitting a shot.
- Tennis-elbow-addled fans admired stars like Borg and McEnroe because they knew how tough it was to hit accurate, firm strokes with wooden rackets with tiny sweet spots.
- Hernandez's strength allows him to muscle shots even when he doesn't put the bat's sweet spot on the ball.
- Time it correctly, and you'll hit the sweet spot of the ball, launching it farther down the course.
- The sensation is great when you hit the sweet spot and you do have better control and feedback.
- Cue balls also have sweet spots that radiate outward from the center.
- High school and college hitters who use aluminum bats often develop longer, less efficient swings because the bats' larger sweet spots give them greater margin for error.
- Hitters growing up swinging aluminum bats have a greater degree of error when they switch to wood because of the smaller sweet spot on a wooden bat.
- From beginner to tour professional, the aim is the same: hit the ball on the sweet spot in the middle of the clubface.
- 1.1 An optimum point or combination of factors or qualities.
the market may have reached its sweet spot, with prices high enough to encourage sellers but still low enough to promise a good return Example sentencesExamples - Indeed, chances are traditional agencies and interactive shops will continue to resemble each other as each tries to find the sweet spot in the digital economy.
- Various studies have been conducted, but the "sweet spot" seems to be around eight to 15 hedge funds.
- While the market for non-chocolate candy has reached relative maturity, sweet spots in the industry still burst with opportunity.
- The sweet spot, it turned out, was in harnessing the technology they had created to help other doctors run their practices.
- The economy is in a sweet spot that should keep inflation at bay for some time.
- Auctioneer Richard Estes sees three sweet spots with appeal to different audiences.
- That puts Juniper, with its focus on telecoms, in the sweet spot for revenue growth.
- The $2 billion outfit's "sweet spot," he says, is people with a net worth closer to $1 million than $1 billion.
- Scott believes he has found the Japanese market's sweet spot - and, in the last quarter, it was hard to doubt him.
- After basking in a sweet spot for quite a while, the banks may be headed for a rough patch.
- His job is to find the sweet spot between the creative and the financial sides.
- He is in a very sweet spot as consumer brands and entertainment continue to converge.
- The stock market celebrates being in a "sweet spot" of solid growth and stable low interest rates.
- The trick for execs is finding that sweet spot between fighting new technologies and pushing into digital delivery.
- We're reaching the point in the cycle that marks the sweet spot for the equity market.
- This month's issue will help you identify financial warning signs and the sweet spots in this sour economy.
- Growth has settled into the 2 % to 3 % range that many experts consider the country's sweet spot.
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