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 stop [stɒp]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 停止, 车站, 逗留, 填塞, 障碍, (风琴的)音栓

vi. 停止, 被塞住

vt. 塞住, 堵塞, 阻止, 击落, 停止, 终止, 断绝

[化] 光阑; 停机; 限位器

[医] 充填(牙)




    stop
    stopped, stopping
    [ noun ]
    1. the event of something ending

    2. <noun.event>
      it came to a stop at the bottom of the hill
    3. the act of stopping something

    4. <noun.act>
      the third baseman made some remarkable stops
      his stoppage of the flow resulted in a flood
    5. a brief stay in the course of a journey

    6. <noun.act>
      they made a stopover to visit their friends
    7. the state of inactivity following an interruption

    8. <noun.state>
      the negotiations were in arrest
      held them in check
      during the halt he got some lunch
      the momentary stay enabled him to escape the blow
      he spent the entire stop in his seat
    9. a spot where something halts or pauses

    10. <noun.location>
      his next stop is Atlanta
    11. a consonant produced by stopping the flow of air at some point and suddenly releasing it

    12. <noun.communication>
      his stop consonants are too aspirated
    13. a punctuation mark (.) placed at the end of a declarative sentence to indicate a full stop or after abbreviations

    14. <noun.communication>
      in England they call a period a stop
    15. (music) a knob on an organ that is pulled to change the sound quality from the organ pipes

    16. <noun.artifact>
      the organist pulled out all the stops
    17. a mechanical device in a camera that controls size of aperture of the lens

    18. <noun.artifact>
      the new cameras adjust the diaphragm automatically
    19. a restraint that checks the motion of something

    20. <noun.artifact>
      he used a book as a stop to hold the door open
    21. an obstruction in a pipe or tube

    22. <noun.artifact>
      we had to call a plumber to clear out the blockage in the drainpipe
    [ verb ]
    1. come to a halt, stop moving

    2. <verb.motion> halt
      the car stopped
      She stopped in front of a store window
    3. put an end to a state or an activity

    4. <verb.stative>
      cease discontinue give up lay off quit
      Quit teasing your little brother
    5. stop from happening or developing

    6. <verb.social>
      block halt kibosh
      Block his election
      Halt the process
    7. interrupt a trip

    8. <verb.motion>
      stop over
      we stopped at Aunt Mary's house
      they stopped for three days in Florence
    9. cause to stop

    10. <verb.motion>
      stop a car
      stop the thief
    11. prevent completion

    12. <verb.change>
      break break off discontinue
      stop the project
      break off the negotiations
    13. hold back, as of a danger or an enemy; check the expansion or influence of

    14. <verb.competition>
      arrest check contain hold back turn back
      Arrest the downward trend
      Check the growth of communism in South East Asia
      Contain the rebel movement
      Turn back the tide of communism
    15. seize on its way

    16. <verb.contact>
      intercept
      The fighter plane was ordered to intercept an aircraft that had entered the country's airspace
    17. have an end, in a temporal, spatial, or quantitative sense; either spatial or metaphorical

    18. <verb.stative>
      cease end finish terminate
      the bronchioles terminate in a capillary bed
      Your rights stop where you infringe upon the rights of other
      My property ends by the bushes
      The symphony ends in a pianissimo
    19. render unsuitable for passage

    20. <verb.contact>
      bar barricade block block off block up blockade
      block the way
      barricade the streets
      stop the busy road
    21. stop and wait, as if awaiting further instructions or developments

    22. <verb.change>
      hold on
      Hold on a moment!


    Stop \Stop\, v. i.
    1. To cease to go on; to halt, or stand still; to come to a
    stop.

    He bites his lip, and starts;
    Stops on a sudden, looks upon the ground;
    Then lays his finger on his temple: strait
    Springs out into fast gait; then stops again.
    --Shak.

    2. To cease from any motion, or course of action.

    Stop, while ye may, suspend your mad career!
    --Cowper.

    3. To spend a short time; to reside temporarily; to stay; to
    tarry; as, to stop with a friend. [Colloq.]

    By stopping at home till the money was gone. --R. D.
    Blackmore.

    {To stop over}, to stop at a station or airport beyond the
    time of the departure of the train or airplane on which
    one came, with the purpose of continuing one's journey on
    a subsequent train or airplane; to break one's journey.
    See {stopover}, n.


    Stop \Stop\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Stopped}; p. pr. & vb. n.
    {Stopping}.] [OE. stoppen, AS. stoppian (in comp.); akin to
    LG. & D. stoppen, G. stopfen, Icel. stoppa, Sw. stoppa, Dan.
    stoppe; all probably fr. LL. stopare, stupare, fr. L. stuppa
    the coarse part of flax, tow, oakum. Cf. {Estop}, {Stuff},
    {Stupe} a fomentation.]
    1. To close, as an aperture, by filling or by obstructing;
    as, to stop the ears; hence, to stanch, as a wound.
    --Shak.

    2. To obstruct; to render impassable; as, to stop a way,
    road, or passage.

    3. To arrest the progress of; to hinder; to impede; to shut
    in; as, to stop a traveler; to stop the course of a
    stream, or a flow of blood.

    4. To hinder from acting or moving; to prevent the effect or
    efficiency of; to cause to cease; to repress; to restrain;
    to suppress; to interrupt; to suspend; as, to stop the
    execution of a decree, the progress of vice, the
    approaches of old age or infirmity.

    Whose disposition all the world well knows
    Will not be rubbed nor stopped. --Shak.

    5. (Mus.) To regulate the sounds of, as musical strings, by
    pressing them against the finger board with the finger, or
    by shortening in any way the vibrating part.

    6. To point, as a composition; to punctuate. [R.]

    If his sentences were properly stopped. --Landor.

    7. (Naut.) To make fast; to stopper.

    Syn: To obstruct; hinder; impede; repress; suppress;
    restrain; discontinue; delay; interrupt.

    {To stop off} (Founding), to fill (a part of a mold) with
    sand, where a part of the cavity left by the pattern is
    not wanted for the casting.

    {To stop the mouth}. See under {Mouth}.


    Stop \Stop\, n.
    1. The act of stopping, or the state of being stopped;
    hindrance of progress or of action; cessation; repression;
    interruption; check; obstruction.

    It is doubtful . . . whether it contributed anything
    to the stop of the infection. --De Foe.

    Occult qualities put a stop to the improvement of
    natural philosophy. --Sir I.
    Newton.

    It is a great step toward the mastery of our desires
    to give this stop to them. --Locke.

    2. That which stops, impedes, or obstructs; as obstacle; an
    impediment; an obstruction.

    A fatal stop traversed their headlong course.
    --Daniel.

    So melancholy a prospect should inspire us with zeal
    to oppose some stop to the rising torrent. --Rogers.

    3. (Mach.) A device, or piece, as a pin, block, pawl, etc.,
    for arresting or limiting motion, or for determining the
    position to which another part shall be brought.

    4. (Mus.)
    (a) The closing of an aperture in the air passage, or
    pressure of the finger upon the string, of an
    instrument of music, so as to modify the tone; hence,
    any contrivance by which the sounds of a musical
    instrument are regulated.

    The organ sound a time survives the stop.
    --Daniel.
    (b) In the organ, one of the knobs or handles at each side
    of the organist, by which he can draw on or shut off
    any register or row of pipes; the register itself; as,
    the vox humana stop.

    5. (Arch.) A member, plain or molded, formed of a separate
    piece and fixed to a jamb, against which a door or window
    shuts. This takes the place, or answers the purpose, of a
    rebate. Also, a pin or block to prevent a drawer from
    sliding too far.

    6. A point or mark in writing or printing intended to
    distinguish the sentences, parts of a sentence, or
    clauses; a mark of punctuation. See {Punctuation}.

    7. (Opt.) The diaphragm used in optical instruments to cut
    off the marginal portions of a beam of light passing
    through lenses.

    8. (Zo["o]l.) The depression in the face of a dog between the
    skull and the nasal bones. It is conspicuous in the
    bulldog, pug, and some other breeds.

    9. (Phonetics) Some part of the articulating organs, as the
    lips, or the tongue and palate, closed
    (a) so as to cut off the passage of breath or voice
    through the mouth and the nose (distinguished as a
    lip-stop, or a front-stop, etc., as in p, t, d, etc.),
    or
    (b) so as to obstruct, but not entirely cut off, the
    passage, as in l, n, etc.; also, any of the consonants
    so formed. --H. Sweet.

    {Stop bead} (Arch.), the molding screwed to the inner side of
    a window frame, on the face of the pulley stile,
    completing the groove in which the inner sash is to slide.


    {Stop motion} (Mach.), an automatic device for arresting the
    motion of a machine, as when a certain operation is
    completed, or when an imperfection occurs in its
    performance or product, or in the material which is
    supplied to it, etc.

    {Stop plank}, one of a set of planks employed to form a sort
    of dam in some hydraulic works.

    {Stop valve}, a valve that can be closed or opened at will,
    as by hand, for preventing or regulating flow, as of a
    liquid in a pipe; -- in distinction from a valve which is
    operated by the action of the fluid it restrains.

    {Stop watch}, a watch the hands of which can be stopped in
    order to tell exactly the time that has passed, as in
    timing a race. See {Independent seconds watch}, under
    {Independent}, a.

    Syn: Cessation; check; obstruction; obstacle; hindrance;
    impediment; interruption.

    1. The Reagan administration gradually was able at least to stop new spending initiatives.
    2. "When you were above some of the holes, you just breathed on the ball and hoped it would stop around the cup."
    3. In issuing the new statement, which was stronger than expected, the G-7 nations in effect are betting that they can force currency markets to stop driving the dollar down.
    4. Pakistani soldiers set off landslides to block mountain roads and stop Muslim militants from marching into Indian-held Kashmir.
    5. A man who chained himself to his sofa for three weeks to stop smoking is a free man today and says it feels wonderful to have kicked the habit.
    6. "We tried to stop her, but the troops opened fire.
    7. "If we're ever going to advance the sport, we've got to stop acting like criminals," he says.
    8. The Bharatiya Janata Party supports the plan, and the government has vowed to stop it until the matter is heard in court.
    9. Industry and government sources, asking not to be identified by name, said Tuesday that the plane landed with three of its fuel tanks empty and not feeding three of the huge jet's engines, causing them to stop operating.
    10. The gain in the Labor Department's Producer Price Index for finished goods, one stop short of retail, topped last year's rate of 4.0 percent and was more than double the 1987 rate of 2.2 percent.
    11. Hungarian officials fear that the Soviets may stop withdrawing troops until they pay a huge bill Moscow has presented.
    12. He said in comments after his address that Washington should stop blocking loans by the Inter-American Development Bank to Nicaragua.
    13. Eduardas Potashinskas, a Lithuanian activist who monitored today's parliament session, said speakers announced that the Kremlin decreed a stop Tuesday to Soviet supplies of paper and wood products to Lithuania.
    14. Norton said it would "vigorously oppose" the BTR suit, and filed its own suit in federal court in Boston seeking to enjoin BTR's tender offer and to stop BTR from soliciting proxies.
    15. Some feel the momentum of accusation and tension between the United States and Libya will be difficult to stop.
    16. But methyl chloroform, whose potency for ozone destruction is less than 15 percent that of CFCs, remains unregulated and is viewed by much of industry as a potential "bridge" chemical as companies stop using CFCs as cleaning solvents.
    17. He has acknowledged that a sharp reduction in Soviet oil shipments could force Cuba to replace tractors with mules, stop manufacturing adult clothing for five years and reduce bus service in Havana by two-thirds.
    18. Pereira dos Santos said "an incident" occurred after the plane, a Boeing 737-300, made a scheduled stop in Belo Horizonte, 288 miles northwest of Rio.
    19. Without the "strongest action" from FDA to stop the misleading claims, "we are approaching total chaos in the marketplace," Weiss said.
    20. Earl said today that the government promised not to stop cars of suspected aliens based on appearance alone, "but that was never done anyway.
    21. "But now, I get this message saying `Stop working for the Jews, stop working for the oppressors,' and I have to make up my mind," he told the Post. "Most of the others have gone.
    22. The vice president, who visited several Central American countries in June, also called on Nicaragua, Cuba and the Soviet Union to stop arming leftist guerrillas in El Salvador.
    23. Mr. Riantiarno had raised the white flag after "Kecoa," vowing to stop work "until the time is right."
    24. Friday's battle began when about 1,000 riot police, backed by armored vans with multiple tear gas launchers, stormed the campus to stop a rally acy.
    25. However, it is precisely the lack of a traffic stop that makes the system illegal, its critics argue.
    26. Meese arrived in Ecuador Thursday after a five-hour stop in Colombia.
    27. He explained to the committees that "standing down doesn't mean telling them to stop, it's just a pause while you sort things out."
    28. New York has been struggling to stop companies from moving out because of high costs.
    29. The Soviet ambassador to the United Nations on Monday urged Iran and Iraq to stop bombarding each other's capitals and said the escalating "war of the cities" was a major development in the war.
    30. They closed Friday at 8. "If gasoline goes up 10 cents a gallon, you won't stop using your snowmobile," says Ralph Wanger, president of the $800 million Acorn Fund of Chicago.
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