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 rake [rek]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 耙子, 钱耙, 斜度, 浪子

vt. 搜索, 掠过, (用耙子)耙, (使)倾斜

vi. 搜索, 掠过, (用耙子)耙, (使)倾斜

[化] 耙

[经] 搜索, 拼命收集


  1. I'll try and rake out something for you to wear.
    我尽量找些东西给你穿。
  2. Don't rake up the past.
    不要把过去的事都翻出来。


rake
[ noun ]
  1. a dissolute man in fashionable society

  2. <noun.person>
  3. degree of deviation from a horizontal plane

  4. <noun.attribute>
    the roof had a steep pitch
  5. a long-handled tool with a row of teeth at its head; used to move leaves or loosen soil

  6. <noun.artifact>
[ verb ]
  1. move through with or as if with a rake

  2. <verb.motion>
    She raked her fingers through her hair
  3. level or smooth with a rake

  4. <verb.contact>
    rake gravel
  5. sweep the length of

  6. <verb.stative>
    The gunfire raked the coast
  7. examine hastily

  8. <verb.perception> glance over run down scan skim
    She scanned the newspaper headlines while waiting for the taxi
  9. gather with a rake

  10. <verb.contact>
    rake leaves
  11. scrape gently

  12. <verb.contact>
    crease graze
    graze the skin


Rake \Rake\ (r[=a]k), n. [AS. race; akin to OD. rake, D. reek,
OHG. rehho, G. rechen, Icel. reka a shovel, and to Goth.
rikan to heap up, collect, and perhaps to Gr. 'ore`gein to
stretch out, and E. rack to stretch. Cf. {Reckon}.]
1. An implement consisting of a headpiece having teeth, and a
long handle at right angles to it, -- used for collecting
hay, or other light things which are spread over a large
surface, or for breaking and smoothing the earth.

2. A toothed machine drawn by a horse, -- used for collecting
hay or grain; a horserake.

3. [Perhaps a different word.] (Mining) A fissure or mineral
vein traversing the strata vertically, or nearly so; --
called also {rake-vein}.

{Gill rakes}. (Anat.) See under 1st {Gill}.


Rake \Rake\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Raked} (r[=a]kt); p. pr. & vb.
n. {Raking}.] [AS. racian. See 1st {Rake}.]
1. To collect with a rake; as, to rake hay; -- often with up;
as, he raked up the fallen leaves.

2. Hence: To collect or draw together with laborious
industry; to gather from a wide space; to scrape together;
as, to rake together wealth; to rake together slanderous
tales; to rake together the rabble of a town.

3. To pass a rake over; to scrape or scratch with a rake for
the purpose of collecting and clearing off something, or
for stirring up the soil; as, to rake a lawn; to rake a
flower bed.

4. To search through; to scour; to ransack.

The statesman rakes the town to find a plot.
--Swift.

5. To scrape or scratch across; to pass over quickly and
lightly, as a rake does.

Like clouds that rake the mountain summits.
--Wordsworth.

6. (Mil.) To enfilade; to fire in a direction with the length
of; in naval engagements, to cannonade, as a ship, on the
stern or head so that the balls range the whole length of
the deck.

{To rake up}.
(a) To collect together, as the fire (live coals), and
cover with ashes.
(b) To bring up; to search out and bring to notice again;
as, to rake up old scandals.


Rake \Rake\, n. [OE. rakel rash; cf. Icel. reikall wandering,
unsettled, reika to wander.]
A loose, disorderly, vicious man; a person addicted to
lewdness and other scandalous vices; a debauchee; a rou['e].

An illiterate and frivolous old rake. --Macaulay.


Rake \Rake\, v. i.
1. [Icel. reika. Cf. {Rake} a debauchee.] To walk about; to
gad or ramble idly. [Prov. Eng.]

2. [See {Rake} a debauchee.] To act the rake; to lead a
dissolute, debauched life. --Shenstone.

{To rake out} (Falconry), to fly too far and wide from its
master while hovering above waiting till the game is
sprung; -- said of the hawk. --Encyc. Brit.


Rake \Rake\ (r[=a]k), v. i.
1. To use a rake, as for searching or for collecting; to
scrape; to search minutely.

One is for raking in Chaucer for antiquated words.
--Dryden.

2. To pass with violence or rapidity; to scrape along.

Pas could not stay, but over him did rake. --Sir P.
Sidney.


Rake \Rake\, n. [Cf. dial. Sw. raka to reach, and E. reach.]
The inclination of anything from a perpendicular direction;
as, the rake of a roof, a staircase, etc.; especially
(Naut.), the inclination of a mast or funnel, or, in general,
of any part of a vessel not perpendicular to the keel.


Rake \Rake\, v. i.
To incline from a perpendicular direction; as, a mast rakes
aft.

{Raking course} (Bricklaying), a course of bricks laid
diagonally between the face courses in a thick wall, to
strengthen it.

  1. It will be time to rake.
  2. Tax increases being levied now to bring budgets into balance will rake in considerably more revenue once the recession ends.
  3. Manischewitz, which has never strayed far from tradition in 102 years, expects to rake in money for years to come.
  4. A professional snowboarder can rake in $10,000 to $25,000 a year and get a light dusting of commercial fame.
  5. Cruise lines in San Juan, Puerto Rico, quickly unloaded passengers, changed itineraries and sent passengerless liners out to sea after Hugo's winds began to rake the island Sunday morning.
  6. Since John Akers became chief executive in 1985, IBM's stock has fallen to about $88 a share from $130. If the stock merely recovers the ground lost since Mr. Akers took office, he will rake in more than $6.6 million.
  7. Still, McCormick expects to rake in $15 million to $20 million in business from new grocery-store accounts this year.
  8. Although there have been some shortcut methods in use over the years, the classic method of hay making is to cut, rake, windrow and bale or stack hay crop.
  9. A blow to the head from a garden rake sets Susan off on an escape into fantasy.
  10. "I'd go out, rake leaves, work up an appetite, come in and eat like crazy."
  11. To really rake in the bucks, and earn the plaudits of your plunging peers, you must now and again hit on a long shot, which by definition is a horse scorned by the large majority of the fancy.
  12. "Very little, if anything, should be needed after the winter storms" that usually rake the sound.
  13. To add phosphorus, rake bone meal into the soil.
  14. "Three Men and a Baby" is the biggest hit of the Christmas season and continues to rake in revenues.
  15. Some of these have to do with the Avery Fisher Hall, where a gentle rake his been introduced in an attempt to lift the woodwind sound.
  16. Richard Mason, president of Ames Co. in Parkersburg, W. Va., says the Barrett rake "makes sense," but it would be "tough" to explain to consumers.
  17. If you're being attacked, what do you do?" He said that in addition to the threats, the teen-agers struck him with a rake handle.
  18. These are the kinds of questions you used to be able to solve while you leaned on the rake in your driveway, talking to your neighbor and watching your leaves burn and your kids frolic.
  19. The Coast Guard said the cleanup team included guardsmen from Mobile, Ala., who were deployed on skimmer boats and vacuum truckers to shovel, rake and sop up the oil.
  20. And Underhill closes out the season with his favorite thing to make, a light, wood garden rake split from white oak and hickory.
  21. Makers of everything from beer, booze and ice cream rake in dough on it.
  22. But before computer companies can rake in multimedia profits, they must agree on a standard.
  23. Lottery officials and merchants said ticket sales for Saturday's drawing already were double what an average Thursday would rake in.
  24. In the "other" category, 10 people were beaten to death with baseball bats, one with a hammer, three with bricks, one with a rake and another with a shovel.
  25. Two congressional panels are looking into whether "sweetheart" contracts are allowing concessionaires to rake in excessive profits at national parks.
  26. We can use most of what people rake up and burn during their weekend gardening." Floods caused by torrential rains left more than 50,000 people homeless and destroyed this year's crop in southwestern Ethiopia, it was reported Tuesday.
  27. G I mow it, there's nothing to rake up." Normally, the Memorial Day Weekend is when farmers begin to harvest the first of several cuttings of the hay crop.
  28. But Ms. Dukakis also finds time to rake leaves with her husband, do some laundry and clean the house and, particularly important to her, minister to her three children when they need her.
  29. After watching so many financiers rake in profits from reversing LBOs, he finds it "heartening" to see some of the benefits land in the pockets of employees.
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