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 rung [rʌŋ]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. (梯子)踏步, 横档, 轮辐, 粗棍
ring的过去分词



    rung
    [ noun ]
    1. a crosspiece between the legs of a chair

    2. <noun.artifact>
    3. one of the crosspieces that form the steps of a ladder

    4. <noun.artifact>


    Ring \Ring\ (r[i^]ng), v. t. [imp. {Rang} (r[a^]ng) or {Rung}
    (r[u^]ng); p. p. {Rung}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Ringing}.] [AS.
    hringan; akin to Icel. hringja, Sw. ringa, Dan. ringe, OD.
    ringhen, ringkelen. [root]19.]
    1. To cause to sound, especially by striking, as a metallic
    body; as, to ring a bell.

    2. To make (a sound), as by ringing a bell; to sound.

    The shard-borne beetle, with his drowsy hums,
    Hath rung night's yawning peal. --Shak.

    3. To repeat often, loudly, or earnestly.

    {To ring a peal}, to ring a set of changes on a chime of
    bells.

    {To ring the changes upon}. See under {Change}.

    {To ring in} or {To ring out}, to usher, attend on, or
    celebrate, by the ringing of bells; as, to ring out the
    old year and ring in the new. --Tennyson.

    {To ring the bells backward}, to sound the chimes, reversing
    the common order; -- formerly done as a signal of alarm or
    danger. --Sir W. Scott.


    Ring \Ring\ (r[i^]ng), v. t. [imp. {Rang} (r[a^]ng) or {Rung}
    (r[u^]ng); p. p. {Rung}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Ringing}.] [AS.
    hringan; akin to Icel. hringja, Sw. ringa, Dan. ringe, OD.
    ringhen, ringkelen. [root]19.]
    1. To cause to sound, especially by striking, as a metallic
    body; as, to ring a bell.

    2. To make (a sound), as by ringing a bell; to sound.

    The shard-borne beetle, with his drowsy hums,
    Hath rung night's yawning peal. --Shak.

    3. To repeat often, loudly, or earnestly.

    {To ring a peal}, to ring a set of changes on a chime of
    bells.

    {To ring the changes upon}. See under {Change}.

    {To ring in} or {To ring out}, to usher, attend on, or
    celebrate, by the ringing of bells; as, to ring out the
    old year and ring in the new. --Tennyson.

    {To ring the bells backward}, to sound the chimes, reversing
    the common order; -- formerly done as a signal of alarm or
    danger. --Sir W. Scott.


    Rung \Rung\,
    imp. & p. p. of {Ring}.


    Rung \Rung\, n. [OE. ronge, AS. hrung, a staff, rod, pole; akin
    to G. runge a short, thick piece of iron or wood, OD. ronghe
    a prop, support, Icel. r["o]ng a rib in a ship, Goth. Hrugga
    a staff.]
    1. (Shipbuilding) A floor timber in a ship.

    2. One of the rounds of a ladder.

    3. One of the stakes of a cart; a spar; a heavy staff.

    4. (Mach.) One of the radial handles projecting from the rim
    of a steering wheel; also, one of the pins or trundles of
    a lantern wheel.

    1. Nonetheless, the Soviet leader told a post-summit news conference: "We moved one rung, two rungs up the ladder, and this itself is a momentous fact."
    2. The Class A California League, in which the Spurs play, is near the bottom rung of professional baseball, and the Spurs are the last in the league, with two losses for every win.
    3. The Easter weekend box office take was also a spring bonanza for studios suffering through the winter moviegoing doldrums. "Beetlejuice" rung in more than $8 million for the No. 1 position.
    4. They were sold out as quickly as the purchases could be rung up on the cash register.
    5. Gift certificate purchases are often rung up as cash, making it difficult to later trace them.
    6. Still, Cape Verde's per capita gross national product of $530 lands it in the World Bank's middle-income class, comparable to Senegal, and one rung up the development ladder from countries like Kenya and Indonesia.
    7. Instead of climbing a single corporate ladder rung by rung, some women are zigzagging their way higher, moving from company to company, industry to industry or from the private sector to public service and back again.
    8. Instead of climbing a single corporate ladder rung by rung, some women are zigzagging their way higher, moving from company to company, industry to industry or from the private sector to public service and back again.
    9. "But the sport scores high on image surveys," just a rung below skiing and golf.
    10. Nonetheless, Gorbachev said, "We moved one rung, two rungs up the ladder."
    11. Since he has no one to abuse inside the organization, he treats customers as if they were the ones on the next rung down.
    12. With a salary of $115 a month, the Akhikaris live on the bottom rung of the middle class.
    13. Bells also will be rung in the three states _ Montana, Idaho and New Hampshire _ that have not recognized the day as a state holiday, organizers said.
    14. And we've still got migrant workers as the lowest rung of the social and economic ladder.
    15. Cooper had rung overseas colleagues to see if they had looked into psychology and their budgets.
    16. First-time buyers who are looking to avoid the bottom rung and going for two-bedroom flats while prices are cheap.
    17. Gov. George Deukmejian and 2,000 mourners stood silently as, every 60 seconds, the name of a victim of the Stockton schoolyard slayings was read and a tiny bell rung.
    18. On what he says is the bottom salary rung, Levitt normally earns $495 a week.
    19. Ms. Steel, by contrast, was a rung down the Hollywood hierarchy and more comfortable with the system Mr. Kaufman proposed.
    20. A Tory Parliamentary Private Secretary, one of the unpaid bag-carriers on the first rung of the ministerial ladder, breaks off a conversation to head for the chamber: 'I'm going in. I want to pray.
    21. The highest rung of the military justice system last week declared the lower military court had lacked authority, and freed the 19 lawmen on a legal technicality.
    22. They voluntarily sacrifice as many as two weekends a month to absorb the secrets of success, and show their dedication by vowing to reach the next rung in the Amway ladder.
    23. Integrated forecasts that the $297 million move will be the first of many like it in the industry, now that the new tax law has rung down the curtain on property values artificially swollen by depreciation rules.
    24. At the time I harboured some suspicions that the hospital had rung up the dental practice to let them know what had occurred and that the man with the pliers had decided not to face the consequences of his actions. He need not have worried.
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