释义 |
noun bɪŋbiNG Scottish A heap, especially of metallic ore or of waste from a mine. 〈主苏格兰〉一堆(尤指金属矿物或矿区废物) Example sentencesExamples - Today, 1pm The rangers of Chatelherault Country Park in South Lanarkshire lead a day of exploration inside a disused coal bing in search of signs of mining life, wildlife and plant life.
- We may come from tenements and places with pit bings in them but we can storm any stage you want, the bigger the better.
- It must be the worst place I have ever visited - especially the scenic bauxite bings.
- In 1966, when 146 people, mainly children, were killed after a pit bing collapsed in the mining village of Aberfan, she waited six days before visiting the scene.
- You can imagine Willie on top of a pit bing harranguing the men, so he's the hammer.
- In reality, most of Glenmorangie's employees work next to a huge shale bing near Broxburn, West Lothian.
- There is an attractive new orchid known as Young's Helleborine found growing among the scrub on derelict pit bings.
- Scottish Enterprise was involved in a land swap in the early days of developing the site, allowing Hill's company to acquire an ugly but strategically important coal bing for redevelopment while SE got a few acres of its own.
- Kenny Kemp found that for Andy Mooney, the shale bings of East Lothian were just a short hop from Disney courtesy of a pair of Air Jordans.
Synonyms pile, stack, mass, mound, mountain, quantity, load, lot, bundle, jumble
OriginEarly 16th century: from Old Norse bingr 'heap'. RhymesBeijing, bring, Chungking, cling, ding, dingaling, fling, I Ching, king, Kunming, ling, Ming, Nanjing, Peking, ping, ring, sing, Singh, sling, spring, sting, string, swing, Synge, thing, ting, wing, wring, Xining, zing exclamation bɪŋbiNG Indicating a sudden action or event. 砰(表示突然的行为或事件) then, bing, the lights went on Example sentencesExamples - And so we have something that's almost like automatic speaking, speaking in tongues, connected - bing!
- Then do periodic searches on that filename, find everyone who has it, download it, and bing another law broken.
- Something happens to him - bing - this other guy's the president.
- Sometimes it'll be something really exciting and bing, it's gone!
- He may not hit you bing, bing, bing, but sometimes that run comes in the fourth quarter.
- Even for the tiniest items… bing, out comes the plastic.
- They just rehearsed it with the orchestra, bing, went out, put the cameras on, gone.
- Then bing bang boom it hit every one of the myro's that was near us.
- It usually accumulates into a popping sound - and when that happens - bing, you're astral baby.
OriginLate 19th century: (originally dialect in the sense 'sudden bang'): imitative. nounbiNG Scottish A heap, especially of metallic ore or of waste from a mine. 〈主苏格兰〉一堆(尤指金属矿物或矿区废物) Example sentencesExamples - You can imagine Willie on top of a pit bing harranguing the men, so he's the hammer.
- Today, 1pm The rangers of Chatelherault Country Park in South Lanarkshire lead a day of exploration inside a disused coal bing in search of signs of mining life, wildlife and plant life.
- It must be the worst place I have ever visited - especially the scenic bauxite bings.
- In reality, most of Glenmorangie's employees work next to a huge shale bing near Broxburn, West Lothian.
- We may come from tenements and places with pit bings in them but we can storm any stage you want, the bigger the better.
- Scottish Enterprise was involved in a land swap in the early days of developing the site, allowing Hill's company to acquire an ugly but strategically important coal bing for redevelopment while SE got a few acres of its own.
- In 1966, when 146 people, mainly children, were killed after a pit bing collapsed in the mining village of Aberfan, she waited six days before visiting the scene.
- There is an attractive new orchid known as Young's Helleborine found growing among the scrub on derelict pit bings.
- Kenny Kemp found that for Andy Mooney, the shale bings of East Lothian were just a short hop from Disney courtesy of a pair of Air Jordans.
Synonyms pile, stack, mass, mound, mountain, quantity, load, lot, bundle, jumble
OriginEarly 16th century: from Old Norse bingr ‘heap’. exclamationbiNG Indicating a sudden action or event. 砰(表示突然的行为或事件) Bing! They've hit you with something 砰!他们用什么东西打着你了。 Example sentencesExamples - And so we have something that's almost like automatic speaking, speaking in tongues, connected - bing!
- It usually accumulates into a popping sound - and when that happens - bing, you're astral baby.
- Sometimes it'll be something really exciting and bing, it's gone!
- Something happens to him - bing - this other guy's the president.
- Even for the tiniest items… bing, out comes the plastic.
- He may not hit you bing, bing, bing, but sometimes that run comes in the fourth quarter.
- They just rehearsed it with the orchestra, bing, went out, put the cameras on, gone.
- Then bing bang boom it hit every one of the myro's that was near us.
- Then do periodic searches on that filename, find everyone who has it, download it, and bing another law broken.
OriginLate 19th century: (originally dialect in the sense ‘sudden bang’): imitative. |