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 remark [ri'mɑ:k]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 评论, 注意

vt. 评论, 注意

vi. 评论, 谈论

[计] 注释




    remark
    [ noun ]
    1. a statement that expresses a personal opinion or belief or adds information

    2. <noun.communication>
      from time to time she contributed a personal comment on his account
    3. explicit notice

    4. <noun.cognition>
      it passed without remark
    [ verb ]
    1. make mention of

    2. <verb.communication> mention note observe
      She observed that his presentation took up too much time
      They noted that it was a fine day to go sailing
    3. make or write a comment on

    4. <verb.communication>
      comment notice point out
      he commented the paper of his colleague


    Remark \Re*mark"\ (r?-m?rk"), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Remarked}
    (-m?rkt"); p. pr. & vb. n. {Remarking}.] [F. remarquer; pref.
    re- re- + marquer to mark, marque a mark, of German origin,
    akin to E. mark. See {Mark}, v. & n.]
    1. To mark in a notable manner; to distinquish clearly; to
    make noticeable or conspicuous; to piont out. [Obs.]

    Thou art a man remarked to taste a mischief. --Ford.

    His manacles remark him; there he sits. --Milton.

    2. To take notice of, or to observe, mentally; as, to remark
    the manner of a speaker.

    3. To express in words or writing, as observed or noticed; to
    state; to say; -- often with a substantive clause; as, he
    remarked that it was time to go.

    Syn: To observe; notice; heed; regard; note; say.

    Usage: {Remark}, {Observe}, {Notice}. To observe is to keep
    or hold a thing distinctly before the mind. To remark
    is simply to mark or take note of whatever may come
    up. To notice implies still less continuity of
    attention. When we turn from these mental states to
    the expression of them in language, we find the same
    distinction. An observation is properly the result of
    somewhat prolonged thought; a remark is usually
    suggested by some passing occurence; a notice is in
    most cases something cursory and short. This
    distinction is not always maintained as to remark and
    observe, which are often used interchangeably.
    ``Observing men may form many judgments by the rules
    of similitude and proportion.'' --I. Watts. ''He can
    not distinguish difficult and noble speculations from
    trifling and vulgar remarks.'' --Collier. ''The thing
    to be regarded, in taking notice of a child's
    miscarriage, is what root it springs from.'' --Locke.


    Remarque \Re*marque"\, n. Also Remark \Remark\ (Engraving)
    (a) A small design etched on the margin of a plate and
    supposed to be removed after the earliest proofs have
    been taken; also, any feature distinguishing a particular
    stage of the plate.
    (b) A print or proof so distinguished; -- commonly called a
    {Remarque proof}.
    [Webster 1913 Suppl.]


    Remark \Re*mark"\ (r?-m?rk"), v. i.
    To make a remark or remarks; to comment.


    Remark \Re*mark"\, n. [Cf. F. remarque.]
    1. Act of remarking or attentively noticing; notice or
    observation.

    The cause, though worth the search, may yet elude
    Conjecture and remark, however shrewd. --Cowper.

    2. The expression, in speech or writing, of something
    remarked or noticed; the mention of that which is worthy
    of attention or notice; hence, also, a casual observation,
    comment, or statement; as, a pertinent remark.

    Syn: Observation; note; comment; annotation.

    1. Later, when reporters asked for comment, he replied: "That's interesting, that's what I think about it." The vice president's remark came as he traveled aboard Air Force Two to Cincinnati for the Major League All-Star Game Tuesday night.
    2. Connolly's final twist of the knife was his remark that Housman 'will live as long as the BBC'; but it begins to look as if Housman will be the more enduring of the two.
    3. Siraj then retracted his remark.
    4. Chief among the slew of statements by West German officials yesterday was Bundesbank President Karl Otto Poehl's remark that the central bank is "very satisfied" with the state treaty between East and West Germany on economic and social unification.
    5. The remark that created the biggest furor came during an early Globe forum on health care.
    6. But Jamieson said that was because Jimmy Carter didn't use the remark effectively. "It could have been much more damaging than it was, but the Democrats didn't take advantage of it," she said.
    7. Bechtel in 1949 overheard an oil company executive remark that a pipeline from Alberta, Canada, across the Rockies to the Pacific was a great idea.
    8. The unprepared remark drew murmurs from the black-tie audience.
    9. One Labour MP commented that such a remark would 'look good on the 6 o'clock news'. Announcing his intention to take votes on a total of four amendments, Mr Morris said the 'easy' option for him would have been to accept amendment 27.
    10. Souter said the remark was "kind of a statement of math." Souter's response stood out in part because the bookish bachelor has taken great pains in the hearings to portray himself as compassionate and aware of a broad range of human concerns.
    11. The spokesman refused to comment on all questions relating to Reagan's remark.
    12. So the revolution can by no means be branded a failure." Former junior health minister Edwina Currie emerged smiling Wednesday from a grilling by fellow lawmakers over her remark that most British egg production was affected by food poisoning bacteria.
    13. One final remark is required of me as a philosopher.
    14. The town is the hub of California's $150 million raisin industry, and Mr. Stewart's remark went over in some circles like a ton of prunes.
    15. They love to quote - in their favour - Lord Leverhulme's remark that 'I know that half of my advertising budget is wasted.
    16. William Treeby, an attorney for Swaggart, said the remark was made in jest and Swaggart had no intention of filing suit over the ad.
    17. In Cairo, Egyptian Foreign Minister Ismat Abdel-Meguid ordered Israel's ambassador to explain Shamir's remark.
    18. Analysts attributed the shift to a remark Wednesday by Martin Feldstein, former economic adviser to President Reagan, predicting the dollar could fall to a level of 120 yen or lower over the next six months.
    19. A spokesman characterized the president's statement as "a throw-away remark" that hadn't any significance.
    20. The remark, however, was understood to be an extemporaneous comment and not a policy statement that the Reagan administration wanted the currency's new upward course to flatten out.
    21. Turner's remark about Christianity was first made last year and repeated last month at a convention of the American Humanist Association, where he was named Humanist of the Year.
    22. Muggeridge delivered the remark with the same puckish smile and twinkling eyes that enlivened his rigid views against contraception, abortion, divorce and pornography.
    23. 'We have to study the document carefully,' was a typical remark. The European Commission was a prime example.
    24. Who I Was, How I Became What I Am And Who The Hell Am I?' 'Because there's nothing pompous about me' he needlessly adds: in what may be the first pompous remark he has made in an hour of conversation.
    25. The City Council unanimously approved a resolution Friday censuring a councilman for a racist remark about the renaming of an airport for the late U.S. Rep. Mickey Leland.
    26. He said he had been joking, but conceded later that the remark was inappropriate.
    27. After hearing Ozal's remark, union officials said there was no use attending a meeting with Cabinet ministers designed to resolve the pay dispute.
    28. The trigger might be almost anything, overhearing a chance remark, the excitement of the media, a telephone call from an old broker friend, a tip on a sure thing.
    29. I cannot imagine that the Journal would ever use an eight-month-old remark by an executive to characterize the current health of his corporation.
    30. He added: "I think this is very unusual." It takes little historical perspective to recognize the truth of that remark.
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