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   

 league [li:g]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 同盟, 联盟, 盟约

vt. 组联盟, (使)加盟

vi. 组联盟, (使)加盟

[法] 同盟, 联盟




    league
    [ noun ]
    1. an association of sports teams that organizes matches for its members

    2. <noun.group>
    3. an association of states or organizations or individuals for common action

    4. <noun.group>
    5. an obsolete unit of distance of variable length (usually 3 miles)

    6. <noun.quantity>
    [ verb ]
    1. unite to form a league

    2. <verb.change>


    League \League\ (l[=e]g), n. [F. ligue, LL. liga, fr. L. ligare
    to bind; cf. Sp. liga. Cf. {Ally} a confederate, {Ligature}.]
    1. An alliance or combination of two or more nations,
    parties, organizations, or persons, for the accomplishment
    of a purpose which requires a continued course of action,
    as for mutual defense, or for furtherance of commercial,
    religious, or political interests, etc.

    And let there be
    'Twixt us and them no league, nor amity. --Denham.

    2. Specifically: (Sports) An association of sports teams that
    establishes rules of play, decides questions of membership
    in the league, and organizes matches between the member
    teams. In some cases a sports league is called a
    {conference}, as in the {National Football Conference}.
    [PJC]

    Note: A league may be offensive or defensive, or both;
    offensive, when the parties agree to unite in attacking
    a common enemy; defensive, when they agree to a mutual
    defense of each other against an enemy.

    {The Holy League}, an alliance of Roman Catholics formed in
    1576 by influence of the Duke of Guise for the exclusion
    of Protestants from the throne of France.

    {Solemn League and Covenant}. See {Covenant},2.

    {The land league}, an association, organized in Dublin in
    1879, to promote the interests of the Irish tenantry, its
    avowed objects being to secure fixity of tenure, fair
    rent, and free sale of the tenants' interest. It was
    declared illegal by Parliament, but vigorous prosecutions
    have failed to suppress it.

    Syn: Alliance; confederacy; confederation; coalition;
    combination; compact; co["o]peration.


    League \League\ (l[=e]g), n. [Cf. OE. legue, lieue, a measure of
    length, F. lieue, Pr. lega, legua, It. & LL. lega, Sp. legua,
    Pg. legoa, legua; all fr. LL. leuca, of Celtic origin: cf.
    Arm. leo, lev (perh. from French), Ir. leige (perh. from
    English); also Ir. & Gael. leac a flag, a broad, flat stone,
    W. llech, -- such stones having perh. served as a sort of
    milestone (cf. {Cromlech}).]
    1. A measure of length or distance, varying in different
    countries from about 2.4 to 4.6 English statute miles of
    5,280 feet each, and used (as a land measure) chiefly on
    the continent of Europe, and in the Spanish parts of
    America. The marine league of England and the United
    States is equal to three marine, or geographical, miles of
    6080 feet each.

    Note: The English land league is equal to three English
    statute miles. The Spanish and French leagues vary in
    each country according to usage and the kind of
    measurement to which they are applied. The Dutch and
    German leagues contain about four geographical miles,
    or about 4.6 English statute miles.

    2. A stone erected near a public road to mark the distance of
    a league. [Obs.]


    League \League\, v. t.
    To join in a league; to cause to combine for a joint purpose;
    to combine; to unite; as, common interests will league
    heterogeneous elements.


    League \League\, v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Leagued}; p. pr. & vb. n.
    {Leaguing}.] [Cf. F. se liguer. See 2d {League}.]
    To unite in a league or confederacy; to combine for mutual
    support; to confederate. --South.

    1. As you listen to the self-righteous sermonising of the religious and the 'purity league' members, it serves as a forceful reminder of how many would still like to drag us back into that cesspit of ignorance today.
    2. Separately, the stock exchange denied a report that it has assembled a published "league table" of firms with the highest number of unsettled transactions.
    3. FortuneCity climbed the world's premier league of web sites and has more unique users than eBay and CDNow (PC Data Online June 1999), Registered users doubled from 1,5 million to 3,1 million in the last 90 days alone.
    4. The NASL, however, collapsed little more than a decade later in bankruptcy. If the new league - named Major League Soccer, and due to kick-off next April - is to avoid the fate of its predecessors, it has to start well.
    5. As a play, Karate Billy Comes Home at the Royal Court's Theatre Upstairs, which is where The Maiden also began, is not in the same league, but it is broadly the same genre.
    6. Metal bats make it easier to hit home runs and artificially raise players' averages, says Jim Small, a major league spokesman.
    7. One or the other led the league in seven offensive categories.
    8. However, the gradings do not appear in the league tables so the performance of schools and colleges cannot be compared. The tables highlight the extent to which vocational qualifications are the preserve of sixth-form and further-education colleges.
    9. "America is back in space," Democrat Dukakis told a rally in Hartford, Conn. "We are proud and we are thrilled at its achievements and the courage of that crew." Meanwhile, both campaigns quickly found a sponsor to replace the league.
    10. This puts it in the second league of South African life companies.
    11. His lineup includes the likes of McKyer, Deon Sanders and Andre Rison, who lead the league in the unofficial categories of finger pointing and celebratory boogeying.
    12. He said their publication was 'one of the most important post-war innovations in levering up standards'. But Miss Joan Jefferson, the association's president, said the way the league tables were compiled was 'nonsense'.
    13. It was only after a similar league in Brockton, Mass., threatened legal action that Little League officials relented and granted Norwich a charter as a pilot program in February 1988.
    14. "First of all we are going to release all the political prisoners including Aung San Suu Kyi and Tin Oo," Myint U, a league official, said when asked what the party would do if it scored a commanding victory.
    15. The league's flirtation with cable is seen in some quarters as a ploy to get the networks at least to match last year's rights fee of $495 million.
    16. So said a federal judge, in a case involving two players for the minor league Bluefield, Va., Orioles, a Baltimore farm team.
    17. And he doesn't necessarily view Atlanta as a double-A stop in the ascension to Broadway's major league.
    18. "The calling of Dennis Eckersley would cause tremendous adverse publicity for his ball club and for himself and could have a substantial effect on his major league career and this season in particular.
    19. "There is no failure here." If the character of Jimmy Andrews isn't provocation enough, jocks may want to form an anti-defamation league after reading John L'Heureux's "An Honorable Profession" (Viking, 403 pages, $19.95).
    20. He also stressed U.S. support for league efforts to halt the fighting in Lebanon.
    21. Network executives hope the transaction will be a benchmark in future negotiations for other sports rights fees, including major league baseball, which is currently in the middle of a six-year contract.
    22. Besides the current unsettled television contract, the league is struggling with other problems: an unresolved collective-bargaining agreement, two expansion franchises in financial difficulty, and dilemmas over free agency.
    23. The study found that a tae kwon do kick can carry the same energy as a major league fastball racing at 90 mph, and can cave in a person's chest by as much as two inches, creating a high risk of internal injuries.
    24. After the flop of two products, Mr. Kiam's bankers filed a lien against the team if it were ever sold. That angered NFL officials, says one league insider, because the team was already leveraged to the hilt.
    25. Bush said the toss was his mother's "first major league performance.
    26. Through the league, the thrift industry generally presents a united front on major regulatory and legislative issues and its positions frequently prevail.
    27. "After all, this isn't an Al Davis defying the league," an NFL source says.
    28. The ad in the Daytona Beach News-Journal paraphrased comments that James made during a May 10 hearing of the House Judiciary subcommittee on civil and constitutional rights, according to the abortion rights league.
    29. Five years ago: A pair of milestones were achieved in major league baseball as Tom Seaver of the Chicago White Sox gained his 300th victory and Rod Carew of the California Angels got his 3,000th hit.
    30. The nearer-term prospects for the IBA will depend on getting a domestic league off the ground (but not too far), and Murphy says that strides have been made in that direction.
    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