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单词 casualty
释义

Definition of casualty in English:

casualty

nounPlural casualties ˈkaʒjʊəltiˈkæʒ(u)əlti
  • 1A person killed or injured in a war or accident.

    (战争或事故中的)伤亡者

    the shelling caused thousands of civilian casualties
    Example sentencesExamples
    • But casualties involving goods vehicles totalled 97 last year - the highest casualty figure recorded in the Bradford district.
    • Treating seriously injured casualties in extreme cold weather conditions is very difficult.
    • Center court was now a mass casualty scene, with injured personnel streaming out of Corridors 3 and 4 and wounded lying everywhere.
    • In reality these civilians are no less casualties of war than if they were killed on the day the bombing began.
    • Regardless of this, the casualty figures for the Black Death were massive.
    • The difficulty in tracking casualties is that the injured, wounded, and sick may be treated in any number of facilities.
    • World War I saw a civilian casualty rate of about 15 per cent (of total casualties).
    • Road casualty figures just released, show that overall, road deaths are the lowest they have ever been since records began in 1926.
    • And as we get more and faster trains on to the rails we can expect more deaths, so the casualty figures coldly used in cost benefit studies are all going to be out of date anyway.
    • What are our total casualty figures and how many more casualties are we willing to endure?
    • We've arrived here and the casualty figures have risen enormously.
    • The final death and casualty figures for this catastrophe will never be certain, and are so large as to be difficult to comprehend anyway.
    • Then the news started pouring in: four bombed trains, dozens of casualties, hundreds of injured.
    • Swindon's roads have never been safer according to the latest casualty figures.
    • Road casualty figures for 2003 show that serious accidents fell by 15 to 82 compared to the previous year.
    • Another complicating factor is whether or not psychiatric cases are included in the casualty figures.
    • You had heard the news, you heard the casualty figures, and now you saw the trauma that the people went through.
    • Police resorted to firing and one of the casualties was killed in police firing. 15 persons have been arrested.
    • Two of the casualties became badly trapped and fire fighters had to use special cutting equipment to free the injured.
    • Police said the casualty figures would have been much higher if they had not acted on the phone warning.
    Synonyms
    victim, fatality, mortality
    loss, MIA
    (casualties), dead and injured/wounded, missing in action, missing
    1. 1.1 A person or thing badly affected by an event or situation.
      〈喻〉(事件或情况的)受害者,牺牲品
      the building industry has been one of the casualties of the recession

      建筑业已经成为经济衰退的受害者之一。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • But the dream of a new generation of nuclear power may prove to be the real casualty of last week's events.
      • She was an early casualty of what is now being seen as a wasted generation.
      • A prize portfolio could mean a head start in the race, but those overlooked or given poisoned chalices would be early casualties.
      • For Einstein and children like him, confidence is an early casualty.
      • A big, bald-headed dude was passed out on the bunk above, an early casualty of beer and Valium.
      • The first casualties of this disastrous policy have been Asian voters, particularly women.
      • The first casualty of this double taxation was luxury glass, the city's traditional export.
      • Major charities wanted to know how children, often the worst casualties of poverty, saw their own situations.
      • Faculty travel budgets and money for new faculty appointments are often early casualties.
      • In anxious times, the free exchange of ideas is an early casualty.
      • The first casualty of a disaster is always communication.
      • Civil liberties are always early and intended casualties of wars - both actual or metaphoric.
      • Hopefully this cocoon of self-deception will be among the early casualties of the campaign.
      • My voice was an early casualty in the Change, all I could manage was a watery gurgle.
      • It's sad, but current events and an awareness of them has been a casualty of my current lifestyle.
      • But another early casualty is conscience, routinely smothered in the national media echo chamber.
      • The egg was an early casualty of the cholesterol war.
      • The date and location of the forum were a poignant reminder to many of those present of the impact of foot and mouth: the Great Yorkshire Show was the biggest event to fall casualty to the disease.
      • Educated at Westminster and Oriel College, Oxford, he was an early casualty of the Oxford movement.
      Synonyms
      victim, sufferer, loser, loss
    2. 1.2British The department of a hospital providing immediate treatment for emergency cases.
      he went to casualty to have a cut stitched

      他去急诊室把伤口缝合。

      North American term emergency room
      Example sentencesExamples
      • She was taken by ambulance to casualty at Broomfield Hospital, Chelmsford, after she lost consciousness at home at about 7pm.
      • I got another insight into how hard nurses work from witnessing the transfer of a patient from casualty to a hospital in Dublin.
      • In one case, a patient was sent away from casualty, complaining of stomach pain, without a proper examination and told to see his GP if the symptoms persisted.
      • She was treated in casualty and she returned home.
      • He was admitted to casualty in the Mater hospital but released shortly afterwards.
      • John thought it was just a particularly bad headache, but when he went to work the next morning his colleagues sent him straight to casualty at Royal Oldham Hospital.
      • The crackdown on long waits has been dogged by allegations that ambulance staff are deliberately delaying taking patients into casualty until the hospital is ready for them.
      • In the second case, a music teacher had to go to casualty in two separate hospitals on Christmas Day and Boxing Day 1993 after developing problems with his dressing.
      • The police and hospital link-up is thought to be the first in the country, and will see cameras in casualty and the hospital's car park wired to the police station.
    3. 1.3 (chiefly in insurance) an accident or disaster.
      事故,不幸,灾难(主要用于保险中)
      the Insurers acquire all the Policyholder's rights in respect of the casualty which caused the loss

      保险公司获得与造成损失的事故有关的投保人的一切真实情况。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • Had the glass been in place, the casualty would not have occurred.
      • Where a policy provides cover against one of two or more concurrent causes of a casualty, a claim will lie under the policy provided that there is no relevant exclusion.
      • In the present case the retainer is said to be for the purpose of investigating and advising on the casualty.
      • For wool to get wet in the rain is a casualty, though not a grave one; it is not a thing intended but is accidental; it is something which injures the wool from without; it does not develop from within.
      • Examples are: health problems, unemployment, damage to the home due to a casualty or disaster, and other reasons.
      • Thus if the second casualty is due to an excepted peril, the rule of merger which applied in the case of an unrepaired partial loss to defeat the claim has no application.
      • The centre of gravity was so close to the tipping line that a minor force would cause the casualty.
      • The term ‘perils of the sea’ refers only to fortuitous accidents or casualties of the seas.
      • It is hardly surprising in those circumstances that the House of Lords held that the shipowning company could not say that the casualty had occurred without its actual fault and privity.
      • That is this case because the obligation to cover arose at the time of the casualty and it is that which under the approach in Albion gives rise to the double insurance situation.

Origin

Late Middle English (in the sense 'chance, a chance occurrence'): from medieval Latin casualitas, from casualis (see casual), on the pattern of words such as penalty.

Definition of casualty in US English:

casualty

nounˈkæʒ(u)əltiˈkaZH(o͞o)əltē
  • 1A person killed or injured in a war or accident.

    (战争或事故中的)伤亡者

    Example sentencesExamples
    • World War I saw a civilian casualty rate of about 15 per cent (of total casualties).
    • Police said the casualty figures would have been much higher if they had not acted on the phone warning.
    • Police resorted to firing and one of the casualties was killed in police firing. 15 persons have been arrested.
    • Swindon's roads have never been safer according to the latest casualty figures.
    • But casualties involving goods vehicles totalled 97 last year - the highest casualty figure recorded in the Bradford district.
    • The final death and casualty figures for this catastrophe will never be certain, and are so large as to be difficult to comprehend anyway.
    • Another complicating factor is whether or not psychiatric cases are included in the casualty figures.
    • You had heard the news, you heard the casualty figures, and now you saw the trauma that the people went through.
    • And as we get more and faster trains on to the rails we can expect more deaths, so the casualty figures coldly used in cost benefit studies are all going to be out of date anyway.
    • What are our total casualty figures and how many more casualties are we willing to endure?
    • Treating seriously injured casualties in extreme cold weather conditions is very difficult.
    • Road casualty figures just released, show that overall, road deaths are the lowest they have ever been since records began in 1926.
    • In reality these civilians are no less casualties of war than if they were killed on the day the bombing began.
    • The difficulty in tracking casualties is that the injured, wounded, and sick may be treated in any number of facilities.
    • We've arrived here and the casualty figures have risen enormously.
    • Road casualty figures for 2003 show that serious accidents fell by 15 to 82 compared to the previous year.
    • Two of the casualties became badly trapped and fire fighters had to use special cutting equipment to free the injured.
    • Regardless of this, the casualty figures for the Black Death were massive.
    • Then the news started pouring in: four bombed trains, dozens of casualties, hundreds of injured.
    • Center court was now a mass casualty scene, with injured personnel streaming out of Corridors 3 and 4 and wounded lying everywhere.
    Synonyms
    victim, fatality, mortality
    1. 1.1 A person or thing badly affected by an event or situation.
      〈喻〉(事件或情况的)受害者,牺牲品
      the building industry has been one of the casualties of the recession

      建筑业已经成为经济衰退的受害者之一。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • It's sad, but current events and an awareness of them has been a casualty of my current lifestyle.
      • She was an early casualty of what is now being seen as a wasted generation.
      • Major charities wanted to know how children, often the worst casualties of poverty, saw their own situations.
      • Faculty travel budgets and money for new faculty appointments are often early casualties.
      • The egg was an early casualty of the cholesterol war.
      • The first casualty of a disaster is always communication.
      • The first casualty of this double taxation was luxury glass, the city's traditional export.
      • The first casualties of this disastrous policy have been Asian voters, particularly women.
      • My voice was an early casualty in the Change, all I could manage was a watery gurgle.
      • A prize portfolio could mean a head start in the race, but those overlooked or given poisoned chalices would be early casualties.
      • Civil liberties are always early and intended casualties of wars - both actual or metaphoric.
      • For Einstein and children like him, confidence is an early casualty.
      • In anxious times, the free exchange of ideas is an early casualty.
      • But the dream of a new generation of nuclear power may prove to be the real casualty of last week's events.
      • Hopefully this cocoon of self-deception will be among the early casualties of the campaign.
      • But another early casualty is conscience, routinely smothered in the national media echo chamber.
      • Educated at Westminster and Oriel College, Oxford, he was an early casualty of the Oxford movement.
      • The date and location of the forum were a poignant reminder to many of those present of the impact of foot and mouth: the Great Yorkshire Show was the biggest event to fall casualty to the disease.
      • A big, bald-headed dude was passed out on the bunk above, an early casualty of beer and Valium.
      Synonyms
      victim, sufferer, loser, loss
    2. 1.2 (chiefly in insurance) an accident, mishap, or disaster.
      事故,不幸,灾难(主要用于保险中)
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Examples are: health problems, unemployment, damage to the home due to a casualty or disaster, and other reasons.
      • That is this case because the obligation to cover arose at the time of the casualty and it is that which under the approach in Albion gives rise to the double insurance situation.
      • The centre of gravity was so close to the tipping line that a minor force would cause the casualty.
      • Thus if the second casualty is due to an excepted peril, the rule of merger which applied in the case of an unrepaired partial loss to defeat the claim has no application.
      • Where a policy provides cover against one of two or more concurrent causes of a casualty, a claim will lie under the policy provided that there is no relevant exclusion.
      • It is hardly surprising in those circumstances that the House of Lords held that the shipowning company could not say that the casualty had occurred without its actual fault and privity.
      • In the present case the retainer is said to be for the purpose of investigating and advising on the casualty.
      • Had the glass been in place, the casualty would not have occurred.
      • The term ‘perils of the sea’ refers only to fortuitous accidents or casualties of the seas.
      • For wool to get wet in the rain is a casualty, though not a grave one; it is not a thing intended but is accidental; it is something which injures the wool from without; it does not develop from within.

Origin

Late Middle English (in the sense ‘chance, a chance occurrence’): from medieval Latin casualitas, from casualis (see casual), on the pattern of words such as penalty.

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更新时间:2024/9/21 13:41:51