外部链接:    leo英德   dict有道 百度搜索百度 google谷歌 google图片 wiki维基 百度百科百科   

 bury ['bɛrɪ]   添加此单词到默认生词本
vt. 埋葬, 埋藏

  1. Both his grandparents were buried here.
    他的祖父母都葬在这里。
  2. He was sitting with his head buried in a book.
    他坐着埋头看书。
  3. He walked slowly, his hands buried in his pockets.
    他走得很慢,两手插在衣袋里。


bury
buried


Bury \Bur"y\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Buried}; p. pr. & vb. n.
{Burying}.] [OE. burien, birien, berien, AS. byrgan; akin to
beorgan to protect, OHG. bergan, G. bergen, Icel. bjarga, Sw.
berga, Dan. bierge, Goth. ba['i]rgan. [root]95. Cf.
{Burrow}.]
1. To cover out of sight, either by heaping something over,
or by placing within something, as earth, etc.; to conceal
by covering; to hide; as, to bury coals in ashes; to bury
the face in the hands.

And all their confidence
Under the weight of mountains buried deep. --Milton.

2. Specifically: To cover out of sight, as the body of a
deceased person, in a grave, a tomb, or the ocean; to
deposit (a corpse) in its resting place, with funeral
ceremonies; to inter; to inhume.

Lord, suffer me first to go and bury my father.
--Matt. viii.
21.

I'll bury thee in a triumphant grave. --Shak.

3. To hide in oblivion; to put away finally; to abandon; as,
to bury strife.

Give me a bowl of wine
In this I bury all unkindness, Cassius. --Shak.

{Burying beetle} (Zo["o]l.), the general name of many species
of beetles, of the tribe {Necrophaga}; the sexton beetle;
-- so called from their habit of burying small dead
animals by digging away the earth beneath them. The
larv[ae] feed upon decaying flesh, and are useful
scavengers.

{To bury the hatchet}, to lay aside the instruments of war,
and make peace; -- a phrase used in allusion to the custom
observed by the North American Indians, of burying a
tomahawk when they conclude a peace.

Syn: To intomb; inter; inhume; inurn; hide; cover; conceal;
overwhelm; repress.


Bury \Bur"y\ (b[e^]r"r[y^]), n. [See 1st {Borough}.]
1. A borough; a manor; as, the Bury of St. Edmond's;

Note: used as a termination of names of places; as,
Canterbury, Shrewsbury.

2. A manor house; a castle. [Prov. Eng.]

To this very day, the chief house of a manor, or the
lord's seat, is called bury, in some parts of
England. --Miege.

  1. That job, of course, is to bury inflation so deeply it cannot arise again for years.
  2. The only difference is that the Lilco expropriation will go down in history as the first time a government has taken over a private operation not to save it, but to bury it.
  3. "They wouldn't be stupid enough to bury them here anyway," said one officer who spoke on condition of anonymity.
  4. Either you bury your head deep in the sand or you try to do something." Burg, the spokesman for Labor's campaign, says resolving the Palestinian uprising in the disputed West Bank and Gaza Strip is one of Israel's main necessities.
  5. Memories of that violence prompted all political parties to bury their differences after World War II in public consensus and reconciliation.
  6. "I don't know where we'll bury all of them," Dr. Beny Primm, a New York City addiction specialist who served on the federal AIDS commission, said of AIDS victims.
  7. It is the Arabs, after all, who for 43 years have refused to acknowledge Israel, and who must prove with deeds that they want to bury the hatchet.
  8. Mash-Hoor, a bearded Druse Moslem militiaman, greased his AK-47 and wrapped it tightly in a plastic bag to bury it - just in case.
  9. We must bury the weapons and not burn the people.
  10. Dan Quayle missed a once-in-a-campaign opportunity to bury doubts about his competence to serve as president if need be, several political analysts say.
  11. Mrs. Krahelska gave up hope for her husband, but she was never able to bury him or even mourn him openly.
  12. The victim's family was ordered to bury the body within hours.
  13. It also plans to bury some Iraqi equipment hit by U.S. depleted-uranium shells.
  14. Since the author had clearly missed the boat, the honorable thing for Random House and Mr. Bianco would have been to bury the damning evidence.
  15. Some travel companies don't bury restrictions in their ads.
  16. I think we'll have to bury a lot of people." Hausmann said he was working at the pit and saw several co-workers knocked over.
  17. Nevertheless, the accord is already helping offset political damage Mr. Reagan suffered in the Iran-Contra affair and bury questions about his leadership that have persisted during the past 10 months.
  18. Indians nationwide, seeking to bury their ancestors, heralded his decision as a watershed that will influence other museums.
  19. Lisa Whitten of the national board of the Association of Black Psychologists said the violence of city life allowed the boys to bury normal emotions in the frenzy of their attack.
  20. While the two halves of Solidarity represented by Lech Walesa and Prime Minister Tadeusz Mazowiecki were trying to bury each other in an acrimonious battle for the presidency, a fresh-faced unknown from abroad slipped in and nearly stole the electorate.
  21. Gerald Isaaman, chairman of the King's Cross Disaster Fund, said the fund's trustees "decided to bury them on Armistice Day _ a day of remembrance."
  22. But Forbes said he and his brother decided it was right to take his father's body home and bury him in the family plot beside his grandfather.
  23. I sat in a traffic jam while a funeral procession crossed the road, not to bury someone but to raise him, turn his bones, give him a clean shroud, show him what's new in town and put him back in the ground.
  24. The liberal literary set assembled there for a discussion of how to counter Mrs. Thatcher's plans to bury British socialism.
  25. "We can't bury our face in the sand.
  26. "I want to bury her," the 73-year-old undertaker said. "It's a free funeral.
  27. A funeral home director said customers who didn't pay for funerals they ordered were to blame for his failure to bury 44 bodies found in his funeral home earlier this month.
  28. One new feature in this year's tax package represents an effort by the IRS to bury a myth concerning the pre-printed mailing labels which many people have feared contained codes making the taxpayer vulnerable to audits.
  29. "It's time to bury the hatchet," said the man who organized bonfires across England to copy the warning of the Armada given 400 years ago, and Spain's ambassador drove to Cornwall to light the first one Tuesday night.
  30. Bush, who reviled Dukakis during the campaign as "another liberal governor coming out of nowhere," made clear immediately after the election that he hoped to bury the hatchet as quickly as possible.
加入收藏 本地收藏 百度搜藏 QQ书签 美味书签 Google书签 Mister Wong
您正在访问的是
中国词汇量第二的英语词典
更多精彩,登录后发现......
验证码看不清,请点击刷新
  注册