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 slash [slæʃ]   添加此单词到默认生词本
vt. 猛砍, 乱砍

vi. 猛砍, 乱砍

n. 猛砍, 乱砍, 删减

[计] 斜线




    slash
    [ noun ]
    1. a wound made by cutting

    2. <noun.state>
      he put a bandage over the cut
    3. an open tract of land in a forest that is strewn with debris from logging (or fire or wind)

    4. <noun.object>
    5. a punctuation mark (/) used to separate related items of information

    6. <noun.communication>
    7. a strong sweeping cut made with a sharp instrument

    8. <noun.act>
    [ verb ]
    1. cut with sweeping strokes; as with an ax or machete

    2. <verb.contact> cut down
    3. beat severely with a whip or rod

    4. <verb.contact>
      flog lash lather strap trounce welt whip
      The teacher often flogged the students
      The children were severely trounced
    5. cut open

    6. <verb.contact>
      gash
      she slashed her wrists
    7. cut drastically

    8. <verb.change>
      Prices were slashed
    9. move or stir about violently

    10. <verb.motion>
      convulse jactitate thrash thrash about thresh thresh about toss
      The feverish patient thrashed around in his bed


    Slash \Slash\, n.
    1. A long cut; a cut made at random.

    2. A large slit in the material of any garment, made to show
    the lining through the openings.

    3. [Cf. {Slashy}.] pl. Swampy or wet lands overgrown with
    bushes. [Local, U.S.] --Bartlett.

    4. A opening or gap in a forest made by wind, fire, or other
    destructive agency.

    We passed over the shoulder of a ridge and around
    the edge of a fire slash, and then we had the
    mountain fairly before us. --Henry Van
    Dyke.
    [Webster 1913 Suppl.]


    Slash \Slash\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Slashed}; p. pr. & vb. n.
    {Slashing}.] [OE. slaschen, of uncertain origin; cf. OF.
    esclachier to break, esclechier, esclichier, to break, and E.
    slate, slice, slit, v. t.]
    1. To cut by striking violently and at random; to cut in long
    slits.

    2. To lash; to ply the whip to. [R.] --King.

    3. To crack or snap, as a whip. [R.] --Dr. H. More.


    Slash \Slash\, v. i.
    To strike violently and at random, esp. with an edged
    instrument; to lay about one indiscriminately with blows; to
    cut hastily and carelessly.

    Hewing and slashing at their idle shades. --Spenser.

    1. Many apparel retailers have seen their fourth-quarter profits tumble because they were forced to slash prices in the face of sluggish sales.
    2. The retailer also said Monday it will slash 200 jobs at its corporate headquarters in Rocky Hill.
    3. The Bush administration is preparing what some White House officials call a "slash and burn" budget to meet next year's tough target without raising taxes.
    4. Answering questions from an audience in Springfield, Mass., Reagan also sought Thursday to lower expectations that the superpowers will agree soon on an accord to slash their arsenals of intercontinental ballistic missiles.
    5. The steps to the House chamber were lined all day with lobbyists from civil-rights groups who were urging support for the measure, and by representatives of small-business groups, who wore pins bearing the word "quotas" marked by a diagonal, red slash.
    6. The Bush administration is setting next year's superpower summit meeting as the target for completion of a treaty to slash long-range nuclear arsenals by 30 percent to 50 percent.
    7. The city, which has been slow to follow through on many of the budget cuts it has announced, still must slash $465 million from its expenses by the close of its fiscal year June 30. The projected shortfall next year has grown to $3.5 billion.
    8. Shareholders of Recruit Co., the firm at the center of a stock-profiteering and bribery scandal, voted Saturday to slash executives' salaries, company spokesman Yasutaka Natsuka reported.
    9. The high yen also has battered the Japanese economy, causing many Japanese companies to slash capital spending, some of which might have gone for U.S. products.
    10. Frank has been a leader of a group of liberals pressing congressional leaders to slash about $20 billion from the Pentagon budget and redistribute most of it among health, housing, education and other domestic programs.
    11. Companies that slash ad budgets often look to public relations to pick up the slack.
    12. He also wants the company to fire workers and otherwise slash operating costs.
    13. Within six months, all the banks had announced plans to slash their payouts.
    14. Against a tide of new discount operations and supermarkets adding pharmacies, Revco tried to slash prices and move beyond drugs to big-ticket items like small appliances.
    15. Arena also dropped its stunt of past elections in which Mr. D'Aubuisson would slash a watermelon to "reveal" the Christian Democrats, whose party color is green, as "reds" in disguise.
    16. His task at flabby RJR, when he took over the helm four years ago, was to financially restructure the heavily-indebted business, slash its fat and grow the business.
    17. The highlight of the summitt was intended to be the signing of a treaty to slash the superpowers' long-range strategic weapons, but Reagan has suggested that the agreement will not be ready due to time limitations.
    18. And, to slash costs, he is attacking United's slow-moving, free-spending ways, even banning fresh flowers from his office.
    19. A supermarket chain has found a way to slash the price of a little item that almost everyone buys and always at full price: U.S. postage stamps.
    20. Western officials say that even with Gorbachev's promise in December to slash Soviet conventional forces by 500,000 troops and 50,000 tanks, the Warsaw Pact will still outnumber North Atlantic Treaty forces by two to one.
    21. First Fidelity Bancorp. expects to set aside up to $300 million in the second quarter for past-due loans and to slash its dividend 40%.
    22. The coupons, marked by a hypodermic needle with a slash through it, are published daily for free in the Milford Citizen.
    23. But over the unions' objections, Eastern was acquired last year by Texas Air Corp., whose chairman, Frank Lorenzo, has led the campaign to slash industry wages.
    24. Corporate & Junk Bonds Junk bonds issued by Burlington Holdings Inc. jumped Wednesday on news that the company is embarking upon a plan to slash its interest costs.
    25. What else was the Iran-Contra scandal all about?" The armed forces continued to slash active-duty strength in May to accomodate budget cuts, paring more than 7,200 positions from the ranks in one month, the Pentagon said Wednesday.
    26. But the impetus behind the nation's biggest-ever bank merger is a prosaic desire to slash costs, and plans were immediately announced to eliminate 6,200 of those 45,000 jobs and close about 70 of the branches.
    27. For a federal bankruptcy court to slash the state judgment unilaterally, Mr. Jeffers said, might constitute a violation of the Constitution's full faith and credit provisions.
    28. Gov. Evelyn Murphy issued executive orders to slash the state work force and cut state salaries as she defied Gov. Michael S. Dukakis while he was out of town.
    29. The unprofitable airline recently ousted its president, Hollis L. Harris, and instituted a cost-cutting campaign to slash $117 million from this year's operating budget.
    30. Individuals knowledgeable about the case said the plan requires the securities-law claimants, especially the FDIC, to significantly slash their claims against the firm.
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