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 bloom [blum]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 花, 开花, 青春, 钢块

vi. 开花, 焕发青春, 茂盛

vt. 使茂盛, 把...轧成钢坯

[机] 中块, 条钢片, 中钢块


  1. The roses are in full bloom.
    玫瑰花盛开了。
  2. The children are blooming!
    孩子们正在健康成长。
  3. The roses are blooming!
    玫瑰花正在盛开。


bloom
[ noun ]
  1. the organic process of bearing flowers

  2. <noun.process>
    you will stop all bloom if you let the flowers go to seed
  3. reproductive organ of angiosperm plants especially one having showy or colorful parts

  4. <noun.plant>
  5. the best time of youth

  6. <noun.time>
  7. a rosy color (especially in the cheeks) taken as a sign of good health

  8. <noun.state>
  9. the period of greatest prosperity or productivity

  10. <noun.time>
  11. a powdery deposit on a surface

  12. <noun.phenomenon>
[ verb ]
  1. produce or yield flowers

  2. <verb.change> blossom flower
    The cherry tree bloomed


Bloom \Bloom\, n. [OE. blome, fr. Icel. bl?m, bl?mi; akin to Sw.
blom, Goth. bl?ma, OS. bl?mo, D. bloem, OHG. bluomo, bluoma,
G. blume; fr. the same root as AS. bl?wan to blow, blossom.
See {Blow} to bloom, and cf. {Blossom}.]
1. A blossom; the flower of a plant; an expanded bud;
flowers, collectively.

The rich blooms of the tropics. --Prescott.

2. The opening of flowers in general; the state of blossoming
or of having the flowers open; as, the cherry trees are in
bloom. ``Sight of vernal bloom.'' --Milton.

3. A state or time of beauty, freshness, and vigor; an
opening to higher perfection, analogous to that of buds
into blossoms; as, the bloom of youth.

Every successive mother has transmitted a fainter
bloom, a more delicate and briefer beauty.
--Hawthorne.

4. The delicate, powdery coating upon certain growing or
newly-gathered fruits or leaves, as on grapes, plums, etc.
Hence: Anything giving an appearance of attractive
freshness; a flush; a glow.

A new, fresh, brilliant world, with all the bloom
upon it. --Thackeray.

5. The clouded appearance which varnish sometimes takes upon
the surface of a picture.

6. A yellowish deposit or powdery coating which appears on
well-tanned leather. --Knight.

7. (Min.) A popular term for a bright-hued variety of some
minerals; as, the rose-red cobalt bloom.


Bloom \Bloom\, v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Bloomed}; p. pr. & vb. n.
{Blooming}.]
1. To produce or yield blossoms; to blossom; to flower or be
in flower.

A flower which once
In Paradise, fast by the tree of life,
Began to bloom. --Milton.

2. To be in a state of healthful, growing youth and vigor; to
show beauty and freshness, as of flowers; to give promise,
as by or with flowers.

A better country blooms to view,

Beneath a brighter sky. --Logan.


Bloom \Bloom\, v. t.
1. To cause to blossom; to make flourish. [R.]

Charitable affection bloomed them. --Hooker.

2. To bestow a bloom upon; to make blooming or radiant. [R.]
--Milton.

While barred clouds bloom the soft-dying day.
--Keats.


Bloom \Bloom\, n. [AS. bl?ma a mass or lump, [=i]senes bl?ma a
lump or wedge of iron.] (Metal.)
(a) A mass of wrought iron from the Catalan forge or from
the puddling furnace, deprived of its dross, and
shaped usually in the form of an oblong block by
shingling.
(b) A large bar of steel formed directly from an ingot by
hammering or rolling, being a preliminary shape for
further working.

  1. High winds killed some early bloom on the trees, he added, but that won't affect orange production.
  2. "The economy will get a false bloom of health" as consumers temporarily open their wallets, he says.
  3. "We're letting a thousand flowers bloom," says a Bush adviser.
  4. Soon it will bloom with alfalfa, corn, wheat and peaches.
  5. Also applied at bloom time is Elgetol, a "thinner" that burns off some of the flowers, reducing the number of apples a tree will bear.
  6. She pulls out journals that other third-graders kept while growing mystery bulbs. They weren't told what the bulbs were or whether they would bloom.
  7. Vilnius enjoyed another sunny spring day, and tulips were beginning to bloom in carefully tended public gardens throughout the Lithuanian capital.
  8. The magnolia tree is in full bloom and sprinklers cast a soft mist on the flower beds.
  9. Deadheaded regularly or not, marigolds, petunias and impatiens bloom their heads off from spring to frost.
  10. Red tulips planted in squares and along boulevards are in bloom, as are the lilacs bordering sidewalks and apartment buildings around the city.
  11. "The bloom is off the rose," says Richard Derbes, a chemical industry analyst with Morgan Stanley & Co. Paul Nesbit, an aerospace industry analyst with Prudential-Bache Securities Inc., argees.
  12. Equally, however, there is no knowing whether the youthful bloom will mature into another kind of appeal or just fade away, leaving a duller ring behind.
  13. Speaking at a news conference Wednesday, Geraci said laboratory findings confirm that the dolphins that died had eaten fish contaminated with a powerful poison, called brevertoxin, originating from the persistent bloom of red tide algae.
  14. "When you show off your babies you want them to look their best," says Martha DeFrancesco, inserting Q-tips into a rose named Folklore, to widen its bloom.
  15. If you don't want to weed it out in the spring, cut back the bloom stalks before the seeds ripen.
  16. The last remaining part of the mill was the continuous bloom caster, which feeds semifinished steel to the rail mill.
  17. A relationship born when a Navy seaman stationed in the Persian Gulf opened a holiday greetings letter from a Dayton woman by chance is scheduled to bloom into marriage this weekend.
  18. The other day the sun was out, the waterlilies were in bloom and the artfully placed perennials made everyone strolling through happy about life.
  19. The LP's title comes from the fine cut: "Never give up, never slow down, never grow old, never die young." Love seems to be in bloom once again in the rock world.
  20. Winter is an excellent guide: its highlights are fewer and so it sets its own trail, leading you from one to the next. I could dwell on the many types of snowdrop, with names like Mighty Atom, in bloom on Britain's finest rock garden.
  21. The burning of woodlands, apparently the latest tactic of the Palestinian uprising, has spurred an outcry among Israeli Jews whose founding fathers prided themselves on making the deserts bloom.
  22. In 1957, when Mao encouraged critics to speak out with the slogan, "Let a hundred flowers bloom, let a hundred schools of thought contend," Beida teachers declared that "the masses want to overthrow the Communist Party."
  23. The cool, surrounding highlands allow flowers to be picked for nine months of the year: elsewhere they yield just a single bloom.
  24. On page 48 we read that "the most-noted of winter-flowering woody plants are the witch-hazels, which bloom in the dead of winter, notwithstanding severe cold and snow."
  25. In 1972, a massive red tide bloom first brought paralytic shellfish poisoning to New England's southern coast; PSP blooms have occurred there annually since.
  26. Today, it has a governor who has vowed to heal the racial hatreds his opponents have long exploited. The Arkansas air is almost balmy this week; the pansies still bloom.
  27. "The boomers just keep acquiring things and buying the best." Even giant Sears, Roebuck & Co., which can't seem to get sales to bloom elsewhere in its merchandising group, is cultivating record sales of lawn and garden products.
  28. It glows like silk and feels like the bloom of a peach.
  29. For instance, popular lore holds that the first Mormon pioneers who entered the Salt Lake Valley tamed a harsh, barren desert and made it bloom.
  30. The cost would not be great, perhaps a few billion. 'Because gene pools will shrink in a ravaged environment,' says Benford, 'reintroducing diverse traits from frozen tissue samples could help species bloom anew.
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