2012托福 考试:托福写作时必备抽象词(一)
abandon:
用法:If you abandon a place, thing, or person, you leave them forever or for a long time, especially when you should not do so.
例句:As time passed some rituals were abandoned, but the stories, later called myths, persisted and provided material for art and drama. (1995-08)
absorb:
用法:①If an object absorbs something such as liquid, gas, or heat, the liquid or heat enters the object or is drawn into it.
例句:Large animals that inhabit the desert have evolved a number of adaptations for reducing the effects of extreme heat. One adaptation is to be light in color, and to reflect rather than absorb the Sun”s rays. (1997-01)
②If a group is absorbed into a larger group, it becomes part of the larger group.
③If you absorb information, you learn and understand it.
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④If something absorbs a force or shock, it reduces its effect.
⑤If a system or society absorbs changes, effects, or costs, it is able to deal with them without being badly affected.
⑥If something absorbs something such as money, space, or time, it uses up a great deal of it.
⑦If something absorbs you, it interests you a great deal and takes up all your attention and energy.
abstract:①An abstract idea or way of thinking is based on general ideas rather than on real things and events.
②Abstract art makes use of shapes and patterns rather than showing people or things they actually are.
③An abstract of an article, document, or speech is a short piece of writing that summarizes the main points of it.
④If you abstract something from somewhere, you take it from there.
academic: Academic is used to describe things that relate to the work done in schools, colleges, and universities, especially work which involves studying and reasoning rather than practical or technical skills. <a hRef=htTps://Www.EuZw.nEt/miNifoRm.Html>苏州初中语文补习</a>
acquire:①If you acquire something, you buy or obtain it for yourself, or someone gives it to you.
②If you acquire something, such as a skill or a habit, you gradually learn or develop it.
③If you describe something as an acquired taste, you mean that a lot of people do not like it when they first experience it, but often start to like it when they get to know it better.
adapt:①If you adapt to a new situation, you change your ideas or behavior in order to deal with it successfully.
②If you adapt something, you change it to make it suitable for a new purpose or situation.
③If you adapt a book or play, you change it so that it can be made into a film or a television programme.
capable: ①If a person or thing is capable of doing something, they have the ability, capacity, or potential to do it.
②A capable person is competent, efficient, or practical.
capture: ①If you capture someone or something, you catch them or take possession of them, especially in a war, or after a struggle or chase. <a hRef=htTps://Www.EuZw.nEt/miNifoRm.Html>苏州初中语文补习</a>
②If you capture something that you are trying to obtain in competition with other people, you succeeding obtaining it.
③If something captures your attention or imagination, you begin to be interested in it or excited by it.
④If something or someone captures a particular quality, feeling, or atmosphere, they represent or express it successfully.
⑤If an event is captured in a photograph or on film, it is photographed or filmed.
channel: ①If you do something through a particular channel, that is the system or organization that you use to achieve your aims or to communicate.
②If you channel money or resources into something, you arrange for them to be used for that thing, rather than for a wide range of things.
③If you channel your energies or emotions into something, you concentrate on or do that one thing, rather than a range of things.
check: ①To check something, usually something bad, means to stop it from spreading or continuing.
②If someone or something is held or kept in check, they are prevented from becoming too great or powerful.
Claim
用法:①If you say that someone claims that something is true, you mean they say that it is true but you are not sure whether or not they are telling the truth.
② A claim is something which someone says which they cannot prove and which may be false.
例句:①The advantages claimed for such foods over conventionally grown and marketed food products are now being debated.(1995-08)
② As a result, claims that eating a diet consisting entirely of organically grown foods prevents or cures disease or provides other benefits to health have become widely publicized and form the basis for folklore. (1995-08)
《2012托福考试:托福写作时必备抽象词(一)》添加时间:2024-12-14;更新时间:2025-03-09