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 reserved   添加此单词到默认生词本
a. 保留的, 预备的, 预定的, 腼腆的, 不露感情的, 含蓄的, 缄默的, 冷淡的

[法] 用作储备的, 保留的, 预定的




    reserved
    [ adj ]
    1. set aside for the use of a particular person or party

    2. <adj.all>
    3. marked by self-restraint and reticence

    4. <adj.all>
      was habitually reserved in speech, withholding her opinion


    Reserve \Re*serve"\ (r?-z?rv"), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Reserved}.
    (z?rvd");p. pr. & vb. n. {Reserving}.] [F. r['e]server, L.
    reservare, reservatum; pref. re- re- + servare to keep. See
    {Serve}.]
    1. To keep back; to retain; not to deliver, make over, or
    disclose. ``I have reserved to myself nothing.'' --Shak.

    2. Hence, to keep in store for future or special use; to
    withhold from present use for another purpose or time; to
    keep; to retain; to make a reservation[7]. --Gen. xxvii.
    35.

    Note: In cases where one person or party makes a request to
    an agent that some accommodation (such as a hotel room
    or place at a restaurant) be kept (reserved) for their
    use at a particular time, the word reserve applies both
    to the action of the person making the request, and to
    the action of the agent who takes the approproriate
    action (such as a notation in a book of reservations)
    to be certain that the accommodation is available at
    that time.
    [1913 Webster +PJC]

    Hast thou seen the treasures of the hail, which I
    have reserved against the time of trouble? --Job
    xxxviii.
    22,23.

    Reserve your kind looks and language for private
    hours. --Swift.

    3. To make an exception of; to except. [R.]


    Reserved \Re*served"\ (-z?rvd"), a.
    1. Kept for future or special use, or for an exigency; as,
    reserved troops; a reserved seat in a theater.

    2. Restrained from freedom in words or actions; backward, or
    cautious, in communicating one's thoughts and feelings;
    not free or frank.

    To all obliging, yet reserved to all. --Walsh.

    Nothing reserved or sullen was to see. --Dryden.
    -- {Re*serv"ed*ly} (r?-z?rv"?d-l?), adv. --
    {Re*serv"ed*ness}, n.

    1. The desegregation of swimming pools, toilets and other facilities once reserved for whites has changed little for millions of blacks who still face prejudice, poverty and hopelessness.
    2. Japan joined it in 1980, but reserved the right to continue importing products made out of hawkbill and olive ridley catches.
    3. He said a police officer's brother reserved the facility for the group.
    4. While he won't be allowed to call himself Sir Charles _ an honor reserved for British subjects _ he is entitled to use the initials KBE after his name.
    5. At the same time, a certain number of seats on the board will be reserved for small shareholders' nominees.
    6. Three-fifths of the issue is reserved for small investors. Pannonplast, a plastics producer, is next in line.
    7. School officials agreed, but reserved the right to move the case back to Chapter 11 if $2 million could be raised quickly.
    8. Until late in his life an office and secretary in the Cabinet Office were reserved for his use. For more than 50 years Solly Zuckerman continued to tell people unpalatable truths, sometimes with charm but often with impatience.
    9. A state court judge reserved a decision on a request that he prohibit six former top executives of Lord, Geller, Federico, Einstein Inc. from soliciting business or employees from Lord Geller for their new ad agency.
    10. Seven months after "Roger Ackroyd" made her a celebrity, this reserved woman with a horror of publicity created a sensation.
    11. About 200 students held a noisy demonstration Tuesday because the University of the Arts is allowing Pavarotti to use its Schubert Theater on nights that had been reserved for two student productions.
    12. That proportion of places reserved for women on the ruling body will reflect the new union's heavily female membership. At present Britain's largest union is the TGWU general union, with 1.2m members.
    13. Jesse Jackson's extraordinary showing has bathed the party's small universe of movers and shakers in the kind of fear usually reserved for the outbreak of nuclear war.
    14. One of the optical disc drives is reserved for copying each day's work, for back-up. Goods-received notes and invoices are all scanned in as they are received from districts and suppliers.
    15. Party sources have said privately they envision a system where 60 percent of the seats would be reserved for the party and its allies, and 40 percent to independent candidates linked to the Roman Catholic Church or Solidarity.
    16. That's reserved for orders of 1,000 shares a trade or less, primarily for quick execution for individual investors.
    17. A new Class C common, with one-tenth of a vote a share, would be reserved for use in initial public offerings and acquisitions.
    18. That Panhandle area is believed to contain gas, not oil. Martinez has reserved his rights to object to oil development if any should be found off Cape San Blas.
    19. The most obvious contrast is with Hogg. Hogg may be 'ultra-cerebral and terribly reserved' as a UK academic puts it, and he certainly inclines to consensus rather than assertive leadership-from-the-front.
    20. Speed and documentation are important benefits, but more so is the all-inclusive nature of the information that results from assertive and reserved participants. 'The richness of information that results is phenomenally effective,' says Cantrell.
    21. But Mr. Hanemann and a more reserved trader, William J. Garvey, are being especially kind to Comex's 772 members these days.
    22. The church was reserved.
    23. You unintentionally park in spaces reserved for the handicapped.
    24. Clad in white robes reserved for the holiest ceremonies, Emperor Akihito will complete his accession to the throne by communing with the Shinto gods in a room bathed in flickering torchlight.
    25. It added that the company has reserved the right to increase its offer beyond two million shares, in effect a "going-private" transaction that hasn't been explained to shareholders.
    26. Because basalt is difficult to carve and expensive, the stone was reserved for royal use, often as flooring for sacred places.
    27. Mostly, it was because he was a child who died the kind of death usually reserved for people who see it coming.
    28. The "not opposed" category is reserved for Supreme Court nominees considered minimally qualified, while the other two speak for themselves.
    29. Other suspected mutagens are reading your own press releases and parking in reserved spaces at National Airport.
    30. The judge reserved a ruling on the admissibility of documents from Italy, Switzerland and West Germany, saying he would rule before the start of the trial's opening arguments, possibly next week.
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