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 browse [brauz]   添加此单词到默认生词本
vt. 浏览, 吃草

vi. 浏览, 吃草

n. 浏览, 吃草

[计] 浏览


  1. I had a browse through the books on the shelf.
    我浏览了一遍书架上的书。
  2. I spent hours browsing in the bookstore.
    我花了几个小时在书店里浏览图书。
  3. I have a browse on the book on her shelf.
    我浏览了一下她书架上的书。


browse
[ noun ]
  1. vegetation (such as young shoots, twigs, and leaves) that is suitable for animals to eat

  2. <noun.group>
    a deer needs to eat twenty pounds of browse every day
  3. reading superficially or at random

  4. <noun.communication>
  5. the act of feeding by continual nibbling

  6. <noun.act>
[ verb ]
  1. shop around; not necessarily buying

  2. <verb.possession> shop
    I don't need help, I'm just browsing
  3. feed as in a meadow or pasture

  4. <verb.contact>
    crop graze pasture range
    the herd was grazing
  5. look around casually and randomly, without seeking anything in particular

  6. <verb.contact>
    surf
    browse a computer directory
    surf the internet or the world wide web
  7. eat lightly, try different dishes

  8. <verb.consumption>
    graze
    There was so much food at the party that we quickly got sated just by browsing


Browse \Browse\ (brouz), n. [OF. brost, broust, sprout, shoot,
F. brout browse, browsewood, prob. fr. OHG. burst, G. borste,
bristle; cf. also Armor. brousta to browse. See {Bristle},
n., {Brush}, n.]
The tender branches or twigs of trees and shrubs, fit for the
food of cattle and other animals; green food. --Spenser.

Sheep, goats, and oxen, and the nobler steed,
On browse, and corn, and flowery meadows feed.
--Dryden.


Browse \Browse\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Browsed} (brouzd); p. pr.
& vb. n. {Browsing}.] [For broust, OF. brouster, bruster, F.
brouter. See {Browse}, n., and cf. {Brut}.]
1. To eat or nibble off, as the tender branches of trees,
shrubs, etc.; -- said of cattle, sheep, deer, and some
other animals.

Yes, like the stag, when snow the plasture sheets,
The barks of trees thou browsedst. --Shak.

2. To feed on, as pasture; to pasture on; to graze.

Fields . . . browsed by deep-uddered kine.
--Tennyson.

3. To look casually through (a book, books, or a set of
documents), reading those parts which arouse one's
interest. Contrasted with {scan}, in which one typically
is searching for something specific.
[PJC]

3. (Computers) To look at a series of electronic documents on
a computer screen by means of a {browser[2]}.
[PJC]


Browse \Browse\ (brouz), v. i.
1. To feed on the tender branches or shoots of shrubs or
trees, as do cattle, sheep, and deer.

2. To pasture; to feed; to nibble; to graze. --Shak.

3. To look casually through a book, books, or a set of
documents, reading those parts which arouse one's
interest.
[PJC]

4. To search through a group of items to find something, not
previously specified, which may be of interest.
[PJC]

  1. Sam Brown's best-seller right now is John Harvey-Jones's Making It Happen (Harper Collins). If you don't have time to browse through the bookshelves, you can join Executive World, Britain's business book club.
  2. "The things that are most difficult to take are not being able to walk down a street, not being able to browse in a bookshop, not being able to go to a movie _ those trivial sorts of things that you take for granted until you don't have them.
  3. In the future, says Ms. Stedman, personal-computer users may be able to dial up a huge art collection and browse through it from home.
  4. Due to security reasons, they may only get to browse through stores on the first of the mall's six levels.
  5. Within blocks of the Martinique, affluent shoppers browse in Macy's, Lord & Taylor and other stores.
  6. Then he walks to the bookshelves and pretends to browse.
  7. But it specialized in historical and government material and, for readers, wasn't the same as being able to browse a library shelf or bookstore for a good read.
  8. While doing volunteer athletic physicals at our local high school, I had the opportunity to browse through a few history texts.
  9. If you're still interested after the music stops, you can press other buttons to get purchase information, leave a message or browse through those left by other callers.
  10. "I usually browse through it right when I open the mailbox, and leave the bills," says Thomas Buell of Dallas.
  11. Rich's downtown department store once was more than the flagship of a chain, it was a symbol of Atlanta, where Southeastern shoppers came to browse and buy _ and return _ anything they wanted from the legendary family-operated institution.
  12. The number of people who will actually read newspapers on-line, though, is probably very limited. 'It's not an ideal way to browse a newspaper,' says Robert Ingle, president and executive editor of the San Jose Mercury News.
  13. If you want to browse, head also for Saint-Germain des Pres, where the tiny streets running down to the river between rue de Seine and rue du Bac are crammed with antique shops.
  14. As a child he had skipped through the garden gate to browse among the corpses in the hospital mortuary. Dissection, still birth and unanaesthetised amputations were dinner table conversation. I came early to Flaubert.
  15. Shoppers at the swank Bergdorf Goodman for Men witnessed a sweep Thursday by phalanxes of security men, in advance of a browse by a foreign bigwig.
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