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 thread [θred]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 线, 丝, 纤维, 线索

vt. 穿线于, 穿过, 通过, 用线穿成

vi. 穿过

[计] 线索, 线程

[医] 线


  1. I'm afraid I've lost the thread of your argument.
    我恐怕没有抓住你的论据的思路。
  2. The little girl threaded the shells together and wore them round her neck.
    小女孩把贝壳穿成一串,戴在脖子上。


thread
[ noun ]
  1. a fine cord of twisted fibers (of cotton or silk or wool or nylon etc.) used in sewing and weaving

  2. <noun.artifact>
  3. any long object resembling a thin line

  4. <noun.object>
    a mere ribbon of land
    the lighted ribbon of traffic
    from the air the road was a grey thread
    a thread of smoke climbed upward
  5. the connections that link the various parts of an event or argument together

  6. <noun.cognition>
    I couldn't follow his train of thought
    he lost the thread of his argument
  7. the raised helical rib going around a screw

  8. <noun.artifact>
[ verb ]
  1. to move or cause to move in a sinuous, spiral, or circular course

  2. <verb.motion> meander wander weave wind
    the river winds through the hills
    the path meanders through the vineyards
    sometimes, the gout wanders through the entire body
  3. pass a thread through

  4. <verb.contact>
    thread a needle
  5. remove facial hair by tying a fine string around it and pulling at the string

  6. <verb.contact>
    She had her eyebrows threaded
  7. pass through or into

  8. <verb.contact>
    thread tape
    thread film
  9. thread on or as if on a string

  10. <verb.contact>
    draw string
    string pearls on a string
    the child drew glass beads on a string
    thread dried cranberries


Thread \Thread\ (thr[e^]d), n. [OE. threed, [thorn]red, AS.
[thorn]r[=ae]d; akin to D. draad, G. draht wire, thread, OHG.
dr[=a]t, Icel. [thorn]r[=a][eth]r a thread, Sw. tr[*a]d, Dan.
traad, and AS. [thorn]r[=a]wan to twist. See {Throw}, and cf.
{Third}.]
1. A very small twist of flax, wool, cotton, silk, or other
fibrous substance, drawn out to considerable length; a
compound cord consisting of two or more single yarns
doubled, or joined together, and twisted; also, one fiber
of a cord composed of multiple fibers.

2. A filament of any substance, as of glass, gold or silver;
a filamentous part of an object, such as a flower; a
component fiber of any or of any fibrous substance, as of
bark.

3. The prominent part of the spiral of a screw or nut; the
rib. See {Screw}, n., 1.

4. (Fig.) Something continued in a long course or tenor; a
recurrent theme or related sequence of events in a larger
story; as the thread of a story, or of life, or of a
discourse. --Bp. Burnet.

5. Fig.: Composition; quality; fineness. [Obs.]

A neat courtier,
Of a most elegant thread. --B. Jonson.

6. (Computers) A related sequence of instructions or actions
within a program that runs at least in part independent of
other actions within the program; -- such threads are
capable of being executed only in oprating systems
permittnig multitasking.
[PJC]

7. (Computers) A sequence of messages posted to an on-line
newsgroup or discussion group, dealing with the same
topic; -- messages in such a thread typically refer to a
previous posting, thus allowing their identification as
part of the thread. Some news-reading programs allow a
user to follow a single such thread independent of the
other postings to that newsgroup.
[PJC]

{Air thread}, the fine white filaments which are seen
floating in the air in summer, the production of spiders;
gossamer.

{Thread and thrum}, the good and bad together. [Obs.] --Shak.

{Thread cell} (Zo["o]l.), a lasso cell. See under {Lasso}.

{Thread herring} (Zo["o]l.), the gizzard shad. See under
{Gizzard}.

{Thread lace}, lace made of linen thread.

{Thread needle}, a game in which children stand in a row,
joining hands, and in which the outer one, still holding
his neighbor, runs between the others; -- called also
{thread the needle}.


Thread \Thread\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Threaded}; p. pr. & vb. n.
{Threading}.]
1. To pass a thread through the eye of; as, to thread a
needle.

2. To pass or pierce through as a narrow way; also, to effect
or make, as one's way, through or between obstacles; to
thrid.

Heavy trading ships . . . threading the Bosphorus.
--Mitford.

They would not thread the gates. --Shak.

3. To form a thread, or spiral rib, on or in; as, to thread a
screw or nut.

  1. In the British case, targeting the south of England, it worked, but the US is a much bigger place. A common thread of the US electoral comparisons is the insider-outsider contrast.
  2. BRITAIN'S BIGGEST thread maker is to be created by the merger of Coats Viyella's J&P Coats division with English Sewing, which CV acquired last May, when it bought Tootal after a bitter takeover battle.
  3. "Herb the Nerd was a trumped up deal," he said, while the search for Valerie is just "a minor thread" in a campaign that relies on realism.
  4. Charles is heard prominently on the instrumental "Healing Chant." There is a tenuous and harmonious thread to "Yellow Moon," partly due to producer Daniel Lanois' (Peter Gabriel, U2) recording style.
  5. They're hanging by a spider's thread." Exxon officials declined to comment on whether the company is in settlement talks.
  6. He sings on the frailest thread of voice, he dances in brief little spurts of low-key energy, and yet he has the musicality and the wit to make his numbers entrancing.
  7. If they have a common thread it is of light and air and an unstuffy approach to the business of turning a house into a home. The pictures show, better than almost any words, that there are no 'right' and no 'wrong' ways to furnish.
  8. Directly or indirectly, the common thread is Europe.
  9. Even cows are said to find it soothing, while Brahms's spider was literally moved - charmed down its thread by the composer's harmonies and sent scuttling up again by his dissonances. Various solutions to the riddle have been attempted.
  10. The yarn is made on some of the same machines that spun thread for Cheshire Mills fabrics.
  11. "I hung on by a thin thread he wasn't implicated in it.
  12. But to Klejna, "they're always busy years." To get to his sixth floor office in downtown Washington, visitors must thread through a maze of receptionist desks and crowded computer work stations that suggest the commission is outgrowing its space.
  13. "We have not selected the pallbearers yet." _ Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont., on the prospects for a multibillion-dollar tax bill that is hanging by a thread because House and Senate negotiators can't agree on how large it should be.
  14. An improved Dollars 100 bill with a polyester security thread and microscopic printing was launched last summer, but it will not come into full circulation for a number of years.
  15. Well, not draws: rather pulls it protestingly forth like a thread from an overlarge sweater.
  16. The OECD's survey was more circumspect, but the urgent need for financial sector reform runs like a thread through the report. The financial sector effectively means the banks.
  17. But their story shares a common thread with all families who struggled to find each other across a disrupted urban landscape.
  18. Metal thread was not out of place under the small 19th-century dome.
  19. Zebra mussels produce a sticky thread that attaches them to solid objects _ water pipes in Ontario Hydro's case.
  20. Both comments may have some credence, but are improperly and thinly argued. Chapters are also disconnected, with no thematic thread.
  21. The original thread linking all the activities was advertising.
  22. Knives and fine thread effortlessly slice through latex gloves, their only protection.
  23. Because the mark is the basis of a future European currency and already the leading member of the ECU basket with a more than 30% weighting, it is likely to remain a guiding thread for ECU rates.
  24. Then he gave it to a friend who was dying of cancer." The cancer victim died, but the thread was preserved, a precious token.
  25. A common thread runs through the woes of the NLPA, and it tells us no little about what really shapes the times in which we live.
  26. The common thread running through all these efforts is a reduction in individual income tax rates.
  27. Military investigators and industry officials said they haven't found a common thread to link the aircraft's engine failures.
  28. The thread, he says, is physical and-or mental domination "in which the abusee develops almost a total dependance on the abusor." The Shrubsall case has elements of both physical and mental domination, Cleary says.
  29. To many U.S. securities-law specialists, an intriguing common thread among these crackdowns is their coincidental timing.
  30. Abdulaziz is quoted as telling his sons the "thread" of consensus ties to the people is stronger than the "iron bands" of autocracy.
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