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 flounder ['flaundə]   添加此单词到默认生词本
v. 挣扎,折腾,挣扎著前进
n. 挣扎,焦躁,辗转

  1. The little dog was floundering around in the snow, so I picked it up.
    那条小狗在雪中挣扎,我把它抱了起来。
  2. The child floundered in the water till someone jumped in do save him.
    孩子在水中拚命挣扎,直到有人跳入水中把他救起。


flounder
[ noun ]
  1. flesh of any of various American and European flatfish

  2. <noun.food>
  3. any of various European and non-European marine flatfish

  4. <noun.animal>
[ verb ]
  1. walk with great difficulty

  2. <verb.motion> stagger
    He staggered along in the heavy snow
  3. behave awkwardly; have difficulties

  4. <verb.social>
    She is floundering in college


Flounder \Floun"der\, v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Floundered}; p. pr. &
vb. n. {Floundering}.] [Cf. D. flodderen to flap, splash
through mire, E. flounce, v.i., and flounder the fish.]
To fling the limbs and body, as in making efforts to move; to
struggle, as a horse in the mire, or as a fish on land; to
roll, toss, and tumble; to flounce.

They have floundered on from blunder to blunder. --Sir
W. Hamilton.


Flounder \Floun"der\, n.
The act of floundering.


Flounder \Floun"der\, n. [Cf. Sw. flundra; akin to Dan. flynder,
Icel. fly?ra, G. flunder, and perh. to E. flounder, v.i.]
1. (Zo["o]l.) A flatfish of the family {Pleuronectid[ae]}, of
many species.

Note: The common English flounder is {Pleuronectes flesus}.
There are several common American species used as food;
as the smooth flounder ({P. glabra}); the rough or
winter flounder ({P. Americanus}); the summer flounder,
or plaice ({Paralichthys dentatus}), Atlantic coast;
and the starry flounder ({Pleuronectes stellatus}).

2. (Bootmaking) A tool used in crimping boot fronts.

  1. Stocks of flounder and haddock are near record lows.
  2. The plant is expected to resume operations when flounder fishing starts in May.
  3. The center's approach contrasts sharply with the government's, where a maze of agencies offer ever more specialized "boutique" services to the poor, who often flounder under the complexity and indifference of the system.
  4. If we flounder, the future of the free way of life will sink with us, but if we succeed, other nations will follow in our wake.
  5. The astronauts' worries about a higher-pressure suit center on the gloves, which they fear could swell up stiff as a frozen flounder, even stiffer than the unpopular shuttle gloves.
  6. Some holders, though, say it's galling to watch Intergroup flounder as steelmakers enjoy their best market in a decade.
  7. Then, as her fame grew, Ms. Anderson began to flounder.
  8. "If the Fed does not come to the rescue and produce lower short-term interest rates over the next 30 days, the market's going to flounder," says Larry Wachtel, a market analyst with Prudential-Bache Securities.
  9. As if President Reagan did not already have enough reasons to veto that flounder, MIGA is one more.
  10. Lost with the Sol E Mar were William Hokanson Sr., 44, and his 19-year-old son, William Jr. The two Fairhaven men set out March 22 from Kelley's Landing for Cape Cod, hoping for a large flounder catch.
  11. Already there are flounder and sole shortages, with cod and haddock expected to be "extremely short" by the fall, says Bob Erkins of Erkins Seafood Letter in Bliss, Idaho.
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