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单词 belong
释义

Definition of belong in English:

belong

verb bɪˈlɒŋbəˈlɔŋ
[no object]
  • 1belong toBe the property of.

    属于,是…的财产

    the vehicle did not belong to him

    这辆车不属他所有。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • This tower will be on property belonging to the Masonic Lodge.
    • They are living in a tiny trailer on the property belonging to a friend of a friend.
    • She has been informed of this and we will endeavour to release any such property that belongs to her.
    • How did the bank give him a loan on a property that belongs to the BMP?
    • It has always been said that Westhoughton Cricket Ground doesn't only belong to the members, but belongs to the town in its present location.
    • Property and cash belonging to Meehan and thought to total over €1 million was seized.
    • The stolen property belonged to employees of the pizzeria.
    • They then went on to ransack a hangar belonging to the property, which houses an aeroplane, helicopter and car.
    • The property belongs to a York family who stay there in the school holidays and rent it out for the remainder of the year.
    • He stressed that while the rectory is the vicar's home, the property belongs to the diocese, which made the final decision to carry out the work.
    • It also makes it more difficult to trace who property belongs to.
    • The third type of site belongs to a property manager with an inventory of homes in a individual destination.
    • The property belongs to The National Trust and the event takes place on the 26th June.
    • Under it, all property belongs to the state and is equally distributed to farmers who can neither sell it nor leave it unused.
    • Property belonging to one of the neighbouring residents was damaged in the incident.
    • He says the civil debt recovery company can confiscate property belonging to the offender to cover any award made by the court.
    • Dispute arose over whether the Broke property, which belongs to friends, was his principle residence.
    • Property belongs to the rightful owner, to lawfully use as he or she sees fit.
    • Generally, land belongs jointly to the members of lineages or other kin groups.
    • This property belongs to the largest private owner of water in Australia.
    Synonyms
    be owned by, be the property of, be the possession of, be in the ownership of, be held by, be at the disposal of, be in the hands of
    1. 1.1 Be due to.
      most of the credit belongs to Paul

      大部分信贷资金归属于保罗。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • Much of the success belongs to the committee members who gave of their time, talents and ideas to help raise awareness and dollars for such a worthwhile cause.
      • That credit belongs to the early Puritan families.
      • All the merit belongs to the players and the coach.
      • Some of the credit belongs to the new structure we've put in place at the Department of Homeland Security.
      • The merit belongs to all psychologists participating, for they make clinical and health psychology advance through the reflections and opinions displayed on these lines, which describe what we are and design what we want to be.
    2. 1.2 (of a contest or period of time) be dominated by.
      (比赛或时间)被…控制
      the race belonged completely to Fogarty

      这场角逐完全被福格蒂主宰。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • The opening period belonged to Celtic, although there was a spark missing from their performance.
      • Th home side dominated the opening period and were 3-up at half time, but the second period belonged to Long Lee.
      • However the Bushrangers seemed set to prove that the match belonged to them.
      • The second period belonged to the home side as they scored five goals without reply for an easy success.
      • Japan had their chances, but in reality the second half belonged to the Juniors as they closed out the game in injury time.
      • The last twenty minutes of the match belonged to Tottenham, appearing in their sixth Final.
      • If the first half belonged to the Cougars the opening period of the second half certainly belonged to Barrow.
      • The second day of the Trophy match belonged to the bowlers as 13 wickets fell in all.
      • Domination of the 110m sprint hurdles, however, belonged to Oxford.
      • Bacall has played dozens of cameos and character roles in the past 30 years, but her most memorable film parts still belong to her Bogart period.
      • However, the second period belonged to their visitors, who rattled in four unanswered goals to win 4-2.
      • Perhaps some will think that in this, like other contests, victory belongs to the party that is left alone in the arena.
      • The second period of this game belonged to one man, Noel Delaney.
      • The first half was fairly even, but the second half belonged to the Zebras.
      • The second round belongs to Jones as he dominates the ring, forcing Filho to accept more punishment than is healthy for any human body.
  • 2belong toBe a member of (a particular group or organization)

    是(某组织、集体或阶层)的成员(或成分)

    he belonged to the local cricket club
    Example sentencesExamples
    • What I love about this group is that it belongs to the members - it's their group and they are in control 100 per cent.
    • The views I present to you today are solely my own and not those of any client I represent or organization I belong to.
    • To accommodate this situation, the National Party would have to drop its policy of preventing members from belonging to other political parties.
    • We are very concerned that people in strategic organizations and people who are well qualified can belong to this organization.
    • But nobody calls it a front for any political organisation, though it has many members who belong to political organisations.
    • Why should members bother to belong to an organisation that negotiates such a dismal contract?
    • They were certified as being members of, or belonging to, or supporting or assisting, an international terrorist group.
    • As, at this stage, most of the bids will still be in the ring, all those committee members belonging to the competing countries will be barred from this executive meeting.
    • They were also accused of belonging to an illegal organization.
    • A person commits an offence if he belongs or professes to belong to a prescribed organisation.
    • She belongs to the same charity organization I do, although I am not sure why.
    • Equity would maintain anyone not belonging to its organization is not a professional.
    • Their handlers belong to an organization that promotes animal welfare.
    • People, irrespective of the economic strata to which they belong, have become quality conscious.
    • We mourn them also as fellow citizens, killed because they belong to the greater whole to which we also all belong.
    • Forty-one UK councillors, three London Assembly members and two MEPs belong to the Green Party
    • Most of the organization's members belong to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.
    • Well, I belonged to similar organizations in college, and let's just say it wouldn't surprise me.
    • Many families in the area had members who belonged to both organizations.
    • He recalls that in Houston, people belonging to a Gandhian organization had tried to stop the performances.
    Synonyms
    be a member of, be in, be included in, be affiliated to, be allied to, be associated with, be connected to, be linked to, be an adherent of
    1. 2.1usually with adverbial of place (of a person) have an affinity for a specified place or situation.
      (人)适应(某地或某种环境)
      she is a stranger, and doesn't belong here

      她是个陌生人,对这里不适应。

      you and me, we belong together

      你我是同属一个地方的人。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • Wise woman that she was, she understood this was a situation where she didn't belong.
      • She realised that she knew little about the community to which she actually belonged.
      • The noise that everybody made and the support that they gave me when I went off the court made me feel like I almost belonged there.
      • Sometimes we'd move back to this dilapidated family home and we would realize again that this was where we really belonged.
      • Changes in the suburbs will help foster a sense of genuine belonging and personal security.
      • As we have already seen, despite their races, regardless of their cultural differences, Mehuru and Frances do belong together.
      • Because even in Egypt I have never belonged, but suddenly it hit me when we arrived in Greece that my foreignness gave me freedom.
      • If you don't belong to a group, then you don't belong here.
      • It will also help strengthen the feeling of belonging among members.
      • I mean, he did so much for the New York theater that I think he really belongs in some very, very special place, as one of the great New Yorkers.
      • Then, suddenly, he will put together a performance that indicates that he does belong there after all.
      • While we have decided to continue attending such events we debated over it for some time. We do not want to put ourselves in a situation where we would feel like we don't belong.
      • But he also belonged, in a geographical sense, to my own home state of Karnataka.
      • Through the imposing doors, facing the multitudes beyond the host stand, you realize you don't belong here.
      • I love my home, I love my job, I love belonging here, and I love this place, but it's trying my patience.
      • He describes himself as perpetually nervous, afraid someone's going to wake him from the dream and put him back in jail, where he probably belongs.
      • He finds a man he can love, and a place in which he finally belongs, a place where life can be led to a Magnetic Fields soundtrack.
      • But there was something in the way he just stood that made it seem he didn't belong.
      • At an intersection we happened upon an extraordinary scene, and for the first time we felt as if we actually belonged there in the streets.
      • You are right, we don't belong together, we may love each other, but we aren't in love with one another.
      Synonyms
      fit in, be suited to, have a rightful place, have a home, be part of
      informal go, click
      affiliation, acceptance, association, attachment, connection, union, integration, closeness
      rapport, fellow feeling, fellowship, kinship, partnership
    2. 2.2 Have the right personal or social qualities to be a member of a particular group.
      (有资格)成为某集体的成员
      young people are generally very anxious to belong

      青年人一般都渴望成为集体的一员。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • I belong to a family which belongs socially and religiously to Kashmir.
      • Society has an obligation to ensure that all its members are able to belong.
      • We want to point to the urgent need to examine the nature and effects of our very limited repertoire of ways of making sense of being, belonging and social order.
      • Others have similar needs for social and ethnic belonging.
      • Well I guess people belong to exclusive clubs, they want to belong for one reason or another.
      • So it's usually up to technology project leaders wanting a seat at the CEO's table to convince management committee members that they belong.
      • Apparently, to belong to an ethnic/racial group you just have to say you belong.
      Synonyms
      belonging, associateship
  • 3with adverbial of place (of a thing) be rightly placed in a specified position.

    (事物)被恰当地置于…

    he put the rifle back in the locker where it belonged
    such statements do not belong in a modern student textbook

    这种说法不能写进现代的教科书。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • It's arguable that religious education belongs in the home and in the churches, and not in the public schools of a country with a constitution that provides for the separation of church and state.
    • Moreover, the basis of the Apollonian-Dionysian opposition belongs squarely within the modern philosophy of the Subject.
    • Man Ray was experimenting with new techniques and compositions and many of the Surrealists used photography to signal that their art belonged firmly in the modern, mechanical world.
    • But Kuo said that the blame for such disasters belongs on public construction projects that used ecological unfriendly engineering methods.
    • Perhaps, like me, you think that too much blame is placed where it doesn't belong.
    • The buck is passed back where it rightly belongs.
    • Those who are worried about these traditions falling into oblivion should preserve them in the archives where they rightly belong.
    • Although the word ‘did’ is not actually in the text itself, as indicated by the italics in the KJV, it rightly belongs there.
    • I seek to change the focus of politics in Ireland away from money and back to families, where it rightly belongs.
    • This money rightly belongs in the pockets of our 3 million taxpayers and should not have been collected in the first place.
    • And thus the ideas of time and space have each its peculiar and exclusive relations; position and figure belonging only to space, while repetition and rhythm are appropriate to time.
    • Have a look at what they actually agreed to and what has been done and then place the blame where it actually belongs.
    • It's now time for the people of the town to get behind them and help them get back where they rightly belong, but let's have fun on the way.
    • If that means we have to stake a position, put down a marker that jobs belong here and your job belongs here, then we should do it and not be afraid to say it.
    • It's time to place the blame for violence where it truly belongs, on the perpetrator and not the tool.
    • What you do get though is a penetrating and revealing look at an important artist, and if you have the slightest interest in the man, this volume belongs on your shelf.
    • He'd once asked a conference of chief executive officers to which leading company the statement belonged.
    • The harmonies belong more to modern concert music than to pop.
    • You may be tempted to lay the blame where it rightly belongs, on others.
    • It was fulfilling to see a club that has battled against adversity for so long finally get back to where they believe they rightly belong.
    1. 3.1 Be rightly assigned to a specified category.
      (在分类上)属于,应归入
      these compounds belong to a class of chemical mediators called kairomones
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Sea salt is the category to which belong many of the kinds of salt specially prized by connoisseurs.
      • As portrayed here, The Alamo belongs in the latter category.
      • Quicksilver is set in the late seventeenth century, and belongs in a category of novels which some would call historical, or picaresque, or possible just an adventure story.
      • The prints of the artists Hao Ping or Hao Boyi belong into this category.
      • This advice or suggestion, a standard supportive technique, belongs in Category 2.
      • So, the Tulip Revolution belongs in the same category as the Orange Revolution, the Rose Revolution, etc.
      • If you see something you think belongs in a different category, by all means let me know.
      • Still others may belong to poorly known metazoan taxa that may or may not belong in any known phyla, and others are probably too poorly preserved to be informative.
      • And indeed, the majority of inventions chosen do belong in this category.
      • Homo, the genus to which modern humans belong, appears in the east African fossil record about 2.4 Ma ago.
      • Divorce presents a particular problem because, as a phenomenon, it belongs under two categories at once.
      • But, of course, differences arise over what belongs in each category.
      • Mosaic tiles used to belong in the same design category as sponging, rag rolling and other DIY paint effects.
      • Actually that belongs in a bottom five category.
      • This link seems to indicate that there is indeed a human species, Homo Sapiens, to the subspecies of which, Homo Sapiens Sapiens all modern humans belong.
      • Therefore cannabis, unlike drugs, which are synthetically made by man or derived from plant sources - such as heroin and cocaine, do not belong in the same category.
      • I'll let you decide which category that belongs in.
      Synonyms
      have a place, be located, be situated, be found, lie, stand, be included, be classed, be classified, be categorized

Derivatives

  • belongingness

  • noun bɪˈlɒŋɪŋnɪsbəˈlɔŋɪŋnəs
    mass noun
    • The state or feeling of belonging to a particular group.

      disruptions in social relationships evoke threats to children's sense of belongingness
      Example sentencesExamples
      • most saw their beliefs as a hallmark of belongingness to their community
      • This model also highlights the importance of the classroom social ecology in promoting a student's sense of belongingness and, thus, motivation to engage in appropriate classroom behavior.
      • A person with healthy boundaries is able to have a solid sense of self and feelings of belongingness to one's family as well as to others outside the family.
      • But the riots wrenched my sense of belongingness from me and since then I have become a wanderer,’ he says visibly in pain.

Origin

Old English belangian, of Germanic origin.

Rhymes

along, bong, chaise longue, Geelong, gong, Guangdong, Haiphong, Heilong, Hong Kong, Jong, King Kong, long, mah-jong, Mao Zedong, Mekong, nong, pong, prolong, sarong, Shillong, song, souchong, strong, thong, throng, tong, Vietcong, wrong

Definition of belong in US English:

belong

verbbəˈlôNGbəˈlɔŋ
[no object]
  • 1belong toBe the property of.

    属于,是…的财产

    the vehicle did not belong to him

    这辆车不属他所有。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • They are living in a tiny trailer on the property belonging to a friend of a friend.
    • How did the bank give him a loan on a property that belongs to the BMP?
    • He stressed that while the rectory is the vicar's home, the property belongs to the diocese, which made the final decision to carry out the work.
    • She has been informed of this and we will endeavour to release any such property that belongs to her.
    • Dispute arose over whether the Broke property, which belongs to friends, was his principle residence.
    • This tower will be on property belonging to the Masonic Lodge.
    • Property belonging to one of the neighbouring residents was damaged in the incident.
    • Property belongs to the rightful owner, to lawfully use as he or she sees fit.
    • The stolen property belonged to employees of the pizzeria.
    • Property and cash belonging to Meehan and thought to total over €1 million was seized.
    • The third type of site belongs to a property manager with an inventory of homes in a individual destination.
    • This property belongs to the largest private owner of water in Australia.
    • He says the civil debt recovery company can confiscate property belonging to the offender to cover any award made by the court.
    • Under it, all property belongs to the state and is equally distributed to farmers who can neither sell it nor leave it unused.
    • It also makes it more difficult to trace who property belongs to.
    • It has always been said that Westhoughton Cricket Ground doesn't only belong to the members, but belongs to the town in its present location.
    • Generally, land belongs jointly to the members of lineages or other kin groups.
    • The property belongs to The National Trust and the event takes place on the 26th June.
    • They then went on to ransack a hangar belonging to the property, which houses an aeroplane, helicopter and car.
    • The property belongs to a York family who stay there in the school holidays and rent it out for the remainder of the year.
    Synonyms
    be owned by, be the property of, be the possession of, be in the ownership of, be held by, be at the disposal of, be in the hands of
    1. 1.1 Be the rightful possession of; be due to.
      是…的合法财产;应付给,欠(某人)
      most of the credit belongs to Paul

      大部分信贷资金归属于保罗。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • All the merit belongs to the players and the coach.
      • That credit belongs to the early Puritan families.
      • The merit belongs to all psychologists participating, for they make clinical and health psychology advance through the reflections and opinions displayed on these lines, which describe what we are and design what we want to be.
      • Some of the credit belongs to the new structure we've put in place at the Department of Homeland Security.
      • Much of the success belongs to the committee members who gave of their time, talents and ideas to help raise awareness and dollars for such a worthwhile cause.
    2. 1.2 (of a contest or period of time) be dominated by.
      (比赛或时间)被…控制
      the race belonged completely to Ferguson

      这场角逐完全被福格蒂主宰。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • Th home side dominated the opening period and were 3-up at half time, but the second period belonged to Long Lee.
      • Domination of the 110m sprint hurdles, however, belonged to Oxford.
      • However the Bushrangers seemed set to prove that the match belonged to them.
      • Bacall has played dozens of cameos and character roles in the past 30 years, but her most memorable film parts still belong to her Bogart period.
      • The second round belongs to Jones as he dominates the ring, forcing Filho to accept more punishment than is healthy for any human body.
      • The second period of this game belonged to one man, Noel Delaney.
      • The second day of the Trophy match belonged to the bowlers as 13 wickets fell in all.
      • Japan had their chances, but in reality the second half belonged to the Juniors as they closed out the game in injury time.
      • The opening period belonged to Celtic, although there was a spark missing from their performance.
      • The second period belonged to the home side as they scored five goals without reply for an easy success.
      • The last twenty minutes of the match belonged to Tottenham, appearing in their sixth Final.
      • Perhaps some will think that in this, like other contests, victory belongs to the party that is left alone in the arena.
      • The first half was fairly even, but the second half belonged to the Zebras.
      • If the first half belonged to the Cougars the opening period of the second half certainly belonged to Barrow.
      • However, the second period belonged to their visitors, who rattled in four unanswered goals to win 4-2.
  • 2belong toBe a member or part of (a particular group, organization, or class)

    是(某组织、集体或阶层)的成员(或成分)

    they belong to garden and bridge clubs

    他们分属园艺俱乐部和桥牌俱乐部。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • She belongs to the same charity organization I do, although I am not sure why.
    • Many families in the area had members who belonged to both organizations.
    • Their handlers belong to an organization that promotes animal welfare.
    • Well, I belonged to similar organizations in college, and let's just say it wouldn't surprise me.
    • But nobody calls it a front for any political organisation, though it has many members who belong to political organisations.
    • We mourn them also as fellow citizens, killed because they belong to the greater whole to which we also all belong.
    • They were certified as being members of, or belonging to, or supporting or assisting, an international terrorist group.
    • Equity would maintain anyone not belonging to its organization is not a professional.
    • They were also accused of belonging to an illegal organization.
    • A person commits an offence if he belongs or professes to belong to a prescribed organisation.
    • People, irrespective of the economic strata to which they belong, have become quality conscious.
    • Why should members bother to belong to an organisation that negotiates such a dismal contract?
    • Forty-one UK councillors, three London Assembly members and two MEPs belong to the Green Party
    • What I love about this group is that it belongs to the members - it's their group and they are in control 100 per cent.
    • The views I present to you today are solely my own and not those of any client I represent or organization I belong to.
    • We are very concerned that people in strategic organizations and people who are well qualified can belong to this organization.
    • Most of the organization's members belong to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.
    • To accommodate this situation, the National Party would have to drop its policy of preventing members from belonging to other political parties.
    • As, at this stage, most of the bids will still be in the ring, all those committee members belonging to the competing countries will be barred from this executive meeting.
    • He recalls that in Houston, people belonging to a Gandhian organization had tried to stop the performances.
    Synonyms
    be a member of, be in, be included in, be affiliated to, be allied to, be associated with, be connected to, be linked to, be an adherent of
    1. 2.1usually with adverbial of place (of a person) fit in a specified place or environment.
      (人)适应(某地或某种环境)
      she is a stranger, and doesn't belong here

      她是个陌生人,对这里不适应。

      you and me, we belong together

      你我是同属一个地方的人。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • But there was something in the way he just stood that made it seem he didn't belong.
      • You are right, we don't belong together, we may love each other, but we aren't in love with one another.
      • The noise that everybody made and the support that they gave me when I went off the court made me feel like I almost belonged there.
      • I love my home, I love my job, I love belonging here, and I love this place, but it's trying my patience.
      • Then, suddenly, he will put together a performance that indicates that he does belong there after all.
      • Sometimes we'd move back to this dilapidated family home and we would realize again that this was where we really belonged.
      • As we have already seen, despite their races, regardless of their cultural differences, Mehuru and Frances do belong together.
      • But he also belonged, in a geographical sense, to my own home state of Karnataka.
      • Because even in Egypt I have never belonged, but suddenly it hit me when we arrived in Greece that my foreignness gave me freedom.
      • Wise woman that she was, she understood this was a situation where she didn't belong.
      • Changes in the suburbs will help foster a sense of genuine belonging and personal security.
      • She realised that she knew little about the community to which she actually belonged.
      • At an intersection we happened upon an extraordinary scene, and for the first time we felt as if we actually belonged there in the streets.
      • It will also help strengthen the feeling of belonging among members.
      • Through the imposing doors, facing the multitudes beyond the host stand, you realize you don't belong here.
      • I mean, he did so much for the New York theater that I think he really belongs in some very, very special place, as one of the great New Yorkers.
      • While we have decided to continue attending such events we debated over it for some time. We do not want to put ourselves in a situation where we would feel like we don't belong.
      • He describes himself as perpetually nervous, afraid someone's going to wake him from the dream and put him back in jail, where he probably belongs.
      • He finds a man he can love, and a place in which he finally belongs, a place where life can be led to a Magnetic Fields soundtrack.
      • If you don't belong to a group, then you don't belong here.
      Synonyms
      fit in, be suited to, have a rightful place, have a home, be part of
      affiliation, acceptance, association, attachment, connection, union, integration, closeness
    2. 2.2 Have the right personal or social qualities to be a member of a particular group.
      (有资格)成为某集体的成员
      young people are generally very anxious to belong

      青年人一般都渴望成为集体的一员。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • We want to point to the urgent need to examine the nature and effects of our very limited repertoire of ways of making sense of being, belonging and social order.
      • I belong to a family which belongs socially and religiously to Kashmir.
      • Apparently, to belong to an ethnic/racial group you just have to say you belong.
      • So it's usually up to technology project leaders wanting a seat at the CEO's table to convince management committee members that they belong.
      • Others have similar needs for social and ethnic belonging.
      • Society has an obligation to ensure that all its members are able to belong.
      • Well I guess people belong to exclusive clubs, they want to belong for one reason or another.
      Synonyms
      belonging, associateship
  • 3with adverbial of place (of a thing) be rightly placed in a specified position.

    (事物)被恰当地置于…

    learning to place the blame where it belongs

    学会责备应受责备的人。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The buck is passed back where it rightly belongs.
    • What you do get though is a penetrating and revealing look at an important artist, and if you have the slightest interest in the man, this volume belongs on your shelf.
    • It was fulfilling to see a club that has battled against adversity for so long finally get back to where they believe they rightly belong.
    • This money rightly belongs in the pockets of our 3 million taxpayers and should not have been collected in the first place.
    • But Kuo said that the blame for such disasters belongs on public construction projects that used ecological unfriendly engineering methods.
    • Moreover, the basis of the Apollonian-Dionysian opposition belongs squarely within the modern philosophy of the Subject.
    • It's arguable that religious education belongs in the home and in the churches, and not in the public schools of a country with a constitution that provides for the separation of church and state.
    • And thus the ideas of time and space have each its peculiar and exclusive relations; position and figure belonging only to space, while repetition and rhythm are appropriate to time.
    • It's now time for the people of the town to get behind them and help them get back where they rightly belong, but let's have fun on the way.
    • You may be tempted to lay the blame where it rightly belongs, on others.
    • Perhaps, like me, you think that too much blame is placed where it doesn't belong.
    • Those who are worried about these traditions falling into oblivion should preserve them in the archives where they rightly belong.
    • He'd once asked a conference of chief executive officers to which leading company the statement belonged.
    • The harmonies belong more to modern concert music than to pop.
    • Have a look at what they actually agreed to and what has been done and then place the blame where it actually belongs.
    • Although the word ‘did’ is not actually in the text itself, as indicated by the italics in the KJV, it rightly belongs there.
    • If that means we have to stake a position, put down a marker that jobs belong here and your job belongs here, then we should do it and not be afraid to say it.
    • Man Ray was experimenting with new techniques and compositions and many of the Surrealists used photography to signal that their art belonged firmly in the modern, mechanical world.
    • I seek to change the focus of politics in Ireland away from money and back to families, where it rightly belongs.
    • It's time to place the blame for violence where it truly belongs, on the perpetrator and not the tool.
    1. 3.1 Be rightly classified in or assigned to a specified category.
      (在分类上)属于,应归入
      bony fish: the vast majority of living fish belong here

      硬骨鱼:现存鱼种多属此类。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • Homo, the genus to which modern humans belong, appears in the east African fossil record about 2.4 Ma ago.
      • And indeed, the majority of inventions chosen do belong in this category.
      • This advice or suggestion, a standard supportive technique, belongs in Category 2.
      • If you see something you think belongs in a different category, by all means let me know.
      • Sea salt is the category to which belong many of the kinds of salt specially prized by connoisseurs.
      • I'll let you decide which category that belongs in.
      • Quicksilver is set in the late seventeenth century, and belongs in a category of novels which some would call historical, or picaresque, or possible just an adventure story.
      • But, of course, differences arise over what belongs in each category.
      • The prints of the artists Hao Ping or Hao Boyi belong into this category.
      • Actually that belongs in a bottom five category.
      • Mosaic tiles used to belong in the same design category as sponging, rag rolling and other DIY paint effects.
      • Therefore cannabis, unlike drugs, which are synthetically made by man or derived from plant sources - such as heroin and cocaine, do not belong in the same category.
      • So, the Tulip Revolution belongs in the same category as the Orange Revolution, the Rose Revolution, etc.
      • Divorce presents a particular problem because, as a phenomenon, it belongs under two categories at once.
      • As portrayed here, The Alamo belongs in the latter category.
      • Still others may belong to poorly known metazoan taxa that may or may not belong in any known phyla, and others are probably too poorly preserved to be informative.
      • This link seems to indicate that there is indeed a human species, Homo Sapiens, to the subspecies of which, Homo Sapiens Sapiens all modern humans belong.
      Synonyms
      have a place, be located, be situated, be found, lie, stand, be included, be classed, be classified, be categorized

Origin

Old English belangian, of Germanic origin.

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