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 hatch [hætʃ]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 孵化, 舱口

vt. 孵, 孵出, 策划

vi. 孵化

[法] 警察局, 监牢, 疯人院


  1. Three of the chickens hatched today.
    今天有三只小鸡出壳。
  2. Chicks are hatching from the eggs.
    小鸡正从蛋壳里孵出来。
  3. Hen's eggs take21 days to hatch out.
    鸡蛋需要21天才孵化。


hatch


Hatch \Hatch\ (h[a^]ch), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Hatched}
(h[a^]cht); p. pr. & vb. n. {Hatching}.] [F. hacher to chop,
hack. See {Hash}.]
1. To cross with lines in a peculiar manner in drawing and
engraving. See {Hatching}.

Shall win this sword, silvered and hatched.
--Chapman.

Those hatching strokes of the pencil. --Dryden.

2. To cross; to spot; to stain; to steep. [Obs.]

His weapon hatched in blood. --Beau. & Fl.


Hatch \Hatch\, v. t. [OE. hacchen, hetchen; akin to G. hecken,
Dan. hekke; cf. MHG. hagen bull; perh. akin to E. hatch a
half door, and originally meaning, to produce under a hatch.
[root]12.]
1. To produce, as young, from an egg or eggs by incubation,
or by artificial heat; to produce young from (eggs); as,
the young when hatched. --Paley.

As the partridge sitteth on eggs, and hatcheth them
not. --Jer. xvii.
11.

For the hens do not sit upon the eggs; but by
keeping them in a certain equal heat they [the
husbandmen] bring life into them and hatch them.
--Robynson
(More's
Utopia).

2. To contrive or plot; to form by meditation, and bring into
being; to originate and produce; to concoct; as, to hatch
mischief; to hatch heresy. --Hooker.

Fancies hatched
In silken-folded idleness. --Tennyson.


Hatch \Hatch\, v. i.
To produce young; -- said of eggs; to come forth from the
egg; -- said of the young of birds, fishes, insects, etc.


Hatch \Hatch\, v. t.
To close with a hatch or hatches.

'T were not amiss to keep our door hatched. --Shak.


Hatch \Hatch\, n.
1. The act of hatching.

2. Development; disclosure; discovery. --Shak.

3. The chickens produced at once or by one incubation; a
brood.


Hatch \Hatch\, n. [OE. hacche, AS. h[ae]c, cf. haca the bar of a
door, D. hek gate, Sw. h["a]ck coop, rack, Dan. hekke manger,
rack. Prob. akin to E. hook, and first used of something made
of pieces fastened together. Cf. {Heck}, {Hack} a frame.]
1. A door with an opening over it; a half door, sometimes set
with spikes on the upper edge.

In at the window, or else o'er the hatch. --Shak.

2. A frame or weir in a river, for catching fish.

3. A flood gate; a sluice gate. --Ainsworth.

4. A bedstead. [Scot.] --Sir W. Scott.

5. An opening in the deck of a vessel or floor of a warehouse
which serves as a passageway or hoistway; a hatchway;
also; a cover or door, or one of the covers used in
closing such an opening.

6. (Mining) An opening into, or in search of, a mine.

{Booby hatch}, {Buttery hatch}, {Companion hatch}, etc. See
under {Booby}, {Buttery}, etc.

{To batten down the hatches} (Naut.), to lay tarpaulins over
them, and secure them with battens.

{To be under hatches}, to be confined below in a vessel; to
be under arrest, or in slavery, distress, etc.

  1. I have stood there at the height of a sedge hatch on a June night and lost my head and my nerve utterly at the sight of a surface boiling with feeding trout. There, too, I suffered an early, indelible trauma.
  2. A few of the down top table guests sloped in. Prince Edward - representing his mother, Britain's Queen Elizabeth - sat in the corner by the royal serving hatch.
  3. The eggs are fertilized outside the shell and hatch into free-swimming larvae called veligers.
  4. 'Each kilo sells for between Dollars 15 and Dollars 20. It can be a very lucrative business but if you're not careful things can go badly wrong.' Despite exhaustive research, scientists have so far failed to hatch eel eggs under laboratory conditions.
  5. The Corrado also has a nice storage shelf that covers the hatch area, if needed.
  6. The crops are destroyed when the larvae hatch and growing maggots eat their way out.
  7. "He gave precise orders to his crew, closed the hatch and stayed on the bridge, dying in the subsequent sinking," Lopez said following the funeral Sunday of the 37-year-old sailor.
  8. Fishing there in high summer for trout, I had caught a couple of big grayling during a hectic hatch of sedges.
  9. The system includes a rapid blowout hatch and a telescoping pole that would enable the astronauts to slide past the potential hazard of striking the wing and then parachute to safety.
  10. The explosion occurred in an emergency equipment storeroom when a firefighting crew opened the hatch to investigate smoke.
  11. Three other fertile condor eggs incubating at the park are expected to hatch at various times within the next six weeks.
  12. The cosmonauts had opened the hatch before the airlock was completely depressurized, and it swung outward with such force that a key joint was damaged.
  13. Researchers hope to wipe out the screwworm by releasing sterilized male Mexican screwworm flies, who will mate with females and prevent them from laying eggs that will hatch.
  14. Each hen produces at least 40 eggs that hatch in incubators after 27 days.
  15. Adult moths do not damage corn, but lay eggs in fields that hatch and can decimate crops.
  16. Normally they lay from one to three eggs and the young hatch in mid-May, she said.
  17. The cabin would have been vented at 40,000 feet so the pressure inside would be equal to the outside to avoid an explosive decompression when the hatch is blown.
  18. Two cosmonauts nearly ran out of oxygen when a sticky hatch prevented them from re-entering their space station, but they will take another space walk next week to repair the door, according to a newspaper report.
  19. The Rogers Commission, which investigated the 1986 Challenger explosion, urged the space agency to return to some type of escape system. NASA, after considering several possibilities, picked the escape hatch and pole.
  20. Another senior minister advised: 'Put your money on April but leave yourself a small escape hatch.'
  21. He and 32 sailors were rescued by a diving bell that was lowered from the surface and attached to the hatch of the Squalus.
  22. Resolution of conflict is flight." But the widespread disappearance of Thailand's once great forests has shut off their escape hatch and most of their traditional sources of livelihood.
  23. The court, by a 5-4 vote in 1988, extended that shield to military contractors in most cases as it threw out a $725,000 jury award to the family of a Marine helicopter copilot killed in a 1983 crash when he was unable to open an escape hatch.
  24. Several years later, I realised that the hatch was of iron blues and that, with a dry fly or a wet Snipe-and-Purple, we must have done great deeds. In those days, we fished the wet fly downstream and nothing else.
  25. Fifteen more of the space eggs hatched Saturday afternoon, and 16 earthbound eggs that were fertilized later are expected to hatch in the next few days.
  26. The hatch, equipped with a wrench, could be opened only from the outside.
  27. The co-pilot's family sued United Technologies alleging negligence in the design of the escape hatch, and a federal court jury in Richmond ruled that the company owed the family $725,000 in damages.
  28. Previous groundings occurred in March 1989 for fuel tank problems, in April 1989 for escape hatch problems, after a crash at Dyess in November 1989 and after an engine fell off one of the planes at Dyess in October.
  29. If it is, the chick would hatch in 55 to 66 days.
  30. Recent changes in bank regulation have left Bank of New York a potential escape hatch.
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