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 space [speis]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 位置, 空间, 距离, 太空, 空白, 间隔, (期刊等的)篇幅

vt. 隔开, 分隔

vi. 留间隔

[计] 空白, 空格校验

[化] 空间

[医] 隙, 间隙, 腔; 空间, 宇宙

[经] 场地, 宇宙空间




    space
    [ noun ]
    1. the unlimited expanse in which everything is located

    2. <noun.tops>
      they tested his ability to locate objects in space
      the boundless regions of the infinite
    3. an empty area (usually bounded in some way between things)

    4. <noun.shape>
      the architect left space in front of the building
      they stopped at an open space in the jungle
      the space between his teeth
    5. an area reserved for some particular purpose

    6. <noun.location>
      the laboratory's floor space
    7. any location outside the Earth's atmosphere

    8. <noun.location>
      the astronauts walked in outer space without a tether
      the first major milestone in space exploration was in 1957, when the USSR's Sputnik 1 orbited the Earth
    9. a blank character used to separate successive words in writing or printing

    10. <noun.communication>
      he said the space is the most important character in the alphabet
    11. the interval between two times

    12. <noun.time>
      the distance from birth to death
      it all happened in the space of 10 minutes
    13. a blank area

    14. <noun.communication>
      write your name in the space provided
    15. one of the areas between or below or above the lines of a musical staff

    16. <noun.communication>
      the spaces are the notes F-A-C-E
    17. (printing) a block of type without a raised letter; used for spacing between words or sentences

    18. <noun.artifact>
    [ verb ]
    1. place at intervals

    2. <verb.motion>
      Space the interviews so that you have some time between the different candidates


    Space \Space\ (sp[=a]s), n. [OE. space, F. espace, from L.
    spatium space; cf. Gr. spa^n to draw, to tear; perh. akin to
    E. span. Cf. {Expatiate}.]
    1. Extension, considered independently of anything which it
    may contain; that which makes extended objects conceivable
    and possible.

    Pure space is capable neither of resistance nor
    motion. --Locke.

    2. Place, having more or less extension; room.

    They gave him chase, and hunted him as hare;
    Long had he no space to dwell [in]. --R. of
    Brunne.

    While I have time and space. --Chaucer.

    3. A quantity or portion of extension; distance from one
    thing to another; an interval between any two or more
    objects; as, the space between two stars or two hills; the
    sound was heard for the space of a mile.

    Put a space betwixt drove and drove. --Gen. xxxii.
    16.

    4. Quantity of time; an interval between two points of time;
    duration; time. ``Grace God gave him here, this land to
    keep long space.'' --R. of brunne.

    Nine times the space that measures day and night.
    --Milton.

    God may defer his judgments for a time, and give a
    people a longer space of repentance. --Tillotson.

    5. A short time; a while. [R.] ``To stay your deadly strife a
    space.'' --Spenser.

    6. Walk; track; path; course. [Obs.]

    This ilke [same] monk let old things pace,
    And held after the new world the space. --Chaucer.

    7. (Print.)
    (a) A small piece of metal cast lower than a face type, so
    as not to receive the ink in printing, -- used to
    separate words or letters.
    (b) The distance or interval between words or letters in
    the lines, or between lines, as in books, on a
    computer screen, etc.

    Note: Spaces are of different thicknesses to enable the
    compositor to arrange the words at equal distances from
    each other in the same line.

    8. (Mus.) One of the intervals, or open places, between the
    lines of the staff.

    9. that portion of the universe outside the earth or its
    atmosphere; -- called also {outer space}.
    [PJC]

    {Absolute space}, {Euclidian space}, etc. See under
    {Absolute}, {Euclidian}, etc.

    {deep space}, the part of outer space which is beyond the
    limits of the solar system.

    {Space line} (Print.), a thin piece of metal used by printers
    to open the lines of type to a regular distance from each
    other, and for other purposes; a lead. --Hansard.

    {Space rule} (Print.), a fine, thin, short metal rule of the
    same height as the type, used in printing short lines in
    tabular matter.


    Space \Space\, v. i. [Cf. OF. espacier, L. spatiari. See
    {Space}, n.]
    To walk; to rove; to roam. [Obs.]

    And loved in forests wild to space. --Spenser.


    Space \Space\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Spaced}; p. pr. & vb. n.
    {Spacong}.] [Cf. F. espacer. See {Space}, n.] (Print.)
    To arrange or adjust the spaces in or between; as, to space
    words, lines, or letters.

    1. The 1991 request for the space station represents a 36 percent, or $699 million, increase over the 1990 amount.
    2. The space institute's 1,500 researchers chose by popular vote its new director, Albert Galeev, 48, also a physicist who was a student of Sagdeev at Novosibirsk University.
    3. Brokers only expect the market to worsen, as One Peachtree Center and two other large towers add 3.6 million square feet, or 31% more space, to the market by 1993.
    4. In some vans, virtually every inch of wall space beyond the driver's seat is given over to speakers and amplifiers.
    5. The elections remained the main event, but have had to share space in the media with a dispute between the Civic Forum and the Christian Democrats.
    6. A major worry has been the psychological impact of the explosion, especially on the space workers and their children.
    7. The legislation provides only about one-fifth of the amount requested by the administration for a manned space station.
    8. This is a difficult question to answer or even to discuss in this limited space.
    9. In Seattle, where there is licensed day care for fewer than half the children who need it, voters approved a school levy in 1986 that included $5 million to create space for child-care facilities in certain schools.
    10. Do you believe Governor Hunt can help you reach some of those by being so strong in the Tennessee Valley? Bush: Well, I think he's a proponent of the space program that I have set forth.
    11. It's possible that plans for the space station may change further even before Mr. Reagan leaves office.
    12. The most enduring symbol of Soviet commitment to manned spaceflight has been the orbiting Mir space station.
    13. Scientists are trying to determine how to counter bone marrow depletion, which results from prolonged space flight.
    14. Six Indian-made satellites have been sent into orbit by space agencies in the Soviet Union, United States and Europe.
    15. "I thought it was a particularly good letter and really sent home to us how much the experiences we have here in space can have an effect on the youngsters of America," Hauck said.
    16. "If you're truly, permanently going to space, you've got to have a system like this," says plant physiologist William Knott, head of the project.
    17. Americans and Soviets contribute to the space junk, too.
    18. A former engineer's $3 billion lawsuit against rocket-maker Morton Thiokol, stemming from his warnings against launching the ill-fated Challenger space shuttle, has been dismissed.
    19. It is designed to test the effects of zero gravity on bone healing in space.
    20. Mr. Traub, who is finishing an autobiography to be published in late 1993 by Random House, has taken office space in Manhattan.
    21. In 1973, the three-man crew of the U.S. space laboratory Skylab 2 made a safe splashdown in the Pacific after spending 59 days in orbit.
    22. Atlanta topped the list of candidates for warehouse space, followed by Chicago, Los Angeles, Dallas-Fort Worth and Seattle.
    23. Visionaries, for example, are more likely to need an outside window. Stabilizers need a lot of closed storage space, so they can tackle only one project at a time.
    24. Discovery returned home today, landing safely on a desert lakebed, after a virtually flawless mission that sent a sun probe hurtling through space and lifted morale at NASA.
    25. James Oberg said Soyuz TM-5, with an Afghan crewman aboard, was rushed into space a year ahead of schedule to assure that it flew before Soviet troops completed withdrawal from Afghanistan.
    26. In a plan approved by President Reagan in April, development of the space station was divided into two phases and scaled down to cut costs.
    27. Providing more performing space than any other theatre in Scotland, the stage will be comparable to that of the Royal Opera House in Covent Garden. The auditorium is of exceptional design and gives the theatre its Grade B listed building status.
    28. Americans overwhelmingly favor maintaining or increasing the federal budget for space exploration, even while three in 10 doubt NASA's competence, a Media General-Associated Press poll has found.
    29. "The exploration of space has benefits for the United States that go far beyond the quantifiable," the president said in the budget plan he presented in January.
    30. Engineers replaced the unit with one from space shuttle Columbia and began the testing of it on the launch pad Tuesday.
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