青年中文青年中文

to keep one的意思

to keep one中文翻譯:

保留一個

相似詞語短語

to keep on───堅持下去

to keep in───守住

to keep off───遠離

to keep out───擋在外面

to keep going───繼續前進

to keep house───管家

to keep on at───繼續

to keep under───守住

to keel over───翻倒

雙語使用場景

You know it's really hard to keep one of these complex worlds going.───你知道,要保證這種復雜的世界不斷運行下去確實是一件困難的事情。

Smallness also makes austerity a bit easier to stomach: everyone knows someone, or knows of someone, who has lost a job or taken a pay cut to keep one.───不過,小型經濟體的緊縮措施對于個體的影響也更加明顯:其中的每個人都直接或間接地知道,要保障一個人的就業就要犧牲另一個人的薪金甚至是工作崗位。

I'll try to keep one pace ahead of all my critics," he quips confidently.───我要努力做到讓那些批評我的人沒話可說。”他滿懷信心又打趣地說到。

Every time I think about buying a car, I consider how much it costs to keep one up.───每次當我想買一輛車時,我會考慮到要花多少錢來維修和保養它。

No one but a foreigner ever thinks of taking them seriously, or as any other than suitable devices by which to keep one's "face. "───只有外國人才會把當場捏造借口當回事,他們沒有想到這種即興創作是一種保全面子的適當方法。

With prices that low, say the Rwandans, children might be able to keep one laptop through their entire school career.───盧安達人民表示,價格如此優惠,可以讓學童在整個求學過程都能擁有一臺小筆電。

His clothes seemed to be just pulled on to keep him covered, like a blanket to keep one warm.───他的衣服好像是隨便地披在身上,就像人們為了保暖,將毯子裹在身上一樣。

The force which must be overcome to keep one surface moving over another in known as sliding friction.───而保證一個平面沿著另一個平面相對移動的力稱為滑動摩擦力。

英語使用場景

It felt good to have something important and challenging to keep one busy, even if it was damage control.

We don't want to sell him but we have to keep one step ahead.

I'd just like to keep one pair.

White even tried to keep one branch open until midnight and to put a Laundromat in another.

I hoped to keep one of them alive for questioning, but they fought hard.

It is usual to keep one at least one specially cooled aquarium with supplementary tanks without temperature regulation.

It cost five times as much to obtain a customer than to keep one. 5.

The reason Chappy is moving around so much is to keep one step ahead I suppose.

Etiquette requires more or less continuous competition among diners to keep one another's tea-cups topped up.