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 mound [maʊnd]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 土墩, 堤, 小山

vt. 筑堤, 用土堆防卫

vi. 积成堆

[医] 耸起, 小丘




    mound
    [ noun ]
    1. (baseball) the slight elevation on which the pitcher stands

    2. <noun.artifact>
    3. a small natural hill

    4. <noun.object>
    5. a collection of objects laid on top of each other

    6. <noun.group>
    7. structure consisting of an artificial heap or bank usually of earth or stones

    8. <noun.artifact>
      they built small mounds to hide behind
    9. the position on a baseball team of the player who throws the ball for a batter to try to hit

    10. <noun.act>
      he has played every position except pitcher
      they have a southpaw on the mound
    [ verb ]
    1. form into a rounded elevation

    2. <verb.creation>
      mound earth


    Mound \Mound\ (mound), n. [F. monde the world, L. mundus. See
    {Mundane}.]
    A ball or globe forming part of the regalia of an emperor or
    other sovereign. It is encircled with bands, enriched with
    precious stones, and surmounted with a cross; -- called also
    {globe}.


    Mound \Mound\, n. [OE. mound, mund, protection, AS. mund
    protection, hand; akin to OHG. munt, Icel. mund hand, and
    prob. to L. manus. See {Manual}.]
    An artificial hill or elevation of earth; a raised bank; an
    embarkment thrown up for defense; a bulwark; a rampart; also,
    a natural elevation appearing as if thrown up artificially; a
    regular and isolated hill, hillock, or knoll.

    To thrid the thickets or to leap the mounds. --Dryden.

    {Mound bird}. (Zo["o]l.) See {moundbird} in the vocabulary.


    {Mound builders} (Ethnol.), the tribe, or tribes, of North
    American aborigines who built, in former times, extensive
    mounds of earth, esp. in the valleys of the Mississippi
    and Ohio Rivers. Formerly they were supposed to have
    preceded the Indians, but later investigations go to show
    that they were, in general, identical with the tribes that
    occupied the country when discovered by Europeans.

    {Mound maker} (Zo["o]l.), any one of the {megapodes}. See
    also {moundbird} in the vocabulary.

    {Shell mound}, a mound of refuse shells, collected by
    aborigines who subsisted largely on shellfish. See
    {Midden}, and {Kitchen middens}.


    Mound \Mound\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Mounded}; p. pr. & vb. n.
    {Mounding}.]
    To fortify or inclose with a mound.

    1. The monument is a great rough granite shaft rising from a mound in the middle of a tawny clearing.
    2. He said the largest Allegheny mound he has even seen was 8 feet across.
    3. But it also acquired a massive mound of debt and faced the daunting task of selling billions of dollars of assets.
    4. A mound of red and white carnations grew steadily at Sakharov's feet, and a spotlight was focused on a portrait showing Sakharov with his hands over his mouth, deep in thought.
    5. Niekro was suspended for 10 days last year after being caught with an emery board and sandpaper on the mound in Anaheim, Calif.
    6. Fire ants also help farmers by attacking pests such as ticks, worms and other insects that damage sugar cane, cotton and pecans. Up to 250,000 ants can live in each mound, which can extend up to six feet in the soil.
    7. A small hand-written sign said, "The First Annual Sanitation Engineers' Sunrise Breakfast." The host said the meal was to still his guilt for a mound of trash from a recent cleaning of his basement.
    8. When pitchers became too dominant in the 1960s, baseball made it harder for them by lowering the height of the mound.
    9. Bush, captain of the 1948 Yale baseball team and an enthusistic lifetime fan, threw the ball lefthanded from the mound.
    10. Vergina first made headlines in 1977 when Professor Manolis Andronikos of Salonica University unearthed the tomb of King Philip of Macedon beneath a mound in the village.
    11. Atop a prehistoric Indian mound here, high as a hawk above the timeless silver curve of the Missouri River, author and local historian Robert L. Dyer weighs the next president and his place in the great sweep of history.
    12. It is an elaborate exercise that is done manually by throwing the wheat into the air on tray-like sifters, so that the grain separates from the chaff and dirt. Gradually, a big pile of the cleansed wheat builds up with the small mound of chaff besides it.
    13. Skeet Rogers parked four farm wagons on a mound and prepared to move his 4,000 alligators there from their pens.
    14. In one, a man stands immersed in a mound of rival plastic cards (he's lucky, he's picked the best one out of the heap).
    15. Winnie, the heroine of Samuel Beckett's Happy Days is visually almost as immobile as any protagonist since Aeschylus's Prometheus Bound: embedded in a mound of earth - in Act One up to her waist, in Act Two up to her neck.
    16. He doesn't just walk off the mound and weep."
    17. Trainers and teammates rushed to the mound and surrounded Dravecky.
    18. "We may even build a small mound," Iseminger said.
    19. Gazing wearily at the mound of asylum applications on her desk, she says about 80% of such requests were granted last year.
    20. At least 80,000 spectators lined the battlefield and sat on the Butte du Lion, a 130-foot mound topped by a lion overlooking the farmlands near Waterloo, today a Brussels suburb, where Napoleon lost his empire.
    21. On July 13, an undersea volcano erupted off the Ito coast, creating a mound 82 feet high, according to the Maritime Safety Agency, Japan's coast guard.
    22. Certainly one of them has been the mound of dollars put into the hands of foreigners by the U.S. trade deficit.
    23. The bushes are never pruned until spring, and their bare skeletons sometimes are protected with a mound of earth or debris piled over their crowns. Nowadays, we can all use Fibre Fleece instead, although the new encyclopaedia does not even mention it.
    24. Two months have passed, the first broods of robins and cardinals have fledged, and the mound of authentic, old-fashioned nesting material remains directly on the ground between a rock and a hard place, getting more unsterile by the day.
    25. After months of therapy and a minor league rehabilitation stint, he returned to the mound Aug. 10 at Candlestick Park and pitched eight innings to earn a 4-3 victory over Cincinnati.
    26. Chucky also is a malevolent mound of plastic whose soul is pure evil.
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