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 bogged 添加此单词到默认生词本
a. 陷入泥沼的,陷于困境的

  1. Our discussions have bogged down.
    我们的讨论陷入了僵局。
  2. The tank (got) bogged down in the mud.
    坦克陷入泥沼之中.



Bog \Bog\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Bogged}; p. pr. & vb. n.
{Bogging}.]
To sink, as into a bog; to submerge in a bog; to cause to
sink and stick, as in mud and mire.

At another time, he was bogged up to the middle in the
slough of Lochend. --Sir W.
Scott.

  1. He said he would open the envelopes early only if there was imminent danger that one juror might drop out or if it appeared that deliberations were getting bogged down.
  2. But with privatization bogged down, there are no significant sales.
  3. The three Baltic Republics, which declared independence earlier this year, have also passed laws allowing private land ownership, although the process is bogged down in disputes over property rights.
  4. But court battles and the lack of a comprehensive policy have bogged down what could well be the world's largest expansion plan, connecting a population of more than 850m to the rest of the world. Contracts for paging systems are yet to be finalised.
  5. But negotiators have been bogged down for six weeks over priorities within the domestic budget.
  6. Software makers are bogged down by the copyrights they must pin down for the thousands of images they put on a typical disk.
  7. On Capitol Hill, Bush's aid proposal will fall into place behind a pending $500 million request for emergency money for Panama, which has been bogged down in disputes about how the new aid will be funded and how it will be used.
  8. He has spent hours in mud up to his armpits trying to drag a bogged animal clear of a creek.
  9. President Bush's order to send American troops into combat in Panama, initially greeted with broad support in Congress, could backfire politically if casualties continue to mount and the United States becomes bogged down there.
  10. However, the negotiations have been bogged down in definitions of weapons categories.
  11. The joint venture to design and construct the refinery was formed in February 1993 but became bogged down in negotiations with authorities in eastern Germany.
  12. Talks on reopening South Korea's second largest shipyard and car plant bogged down Friday and labor unrest spread to other businesses.
  13. This is a splendid part slightly bogged down in more mundane material.
  14. In 1987, the Ongpin program bogged down in the political jostling of the new administration, in infighting that ultimately led Mrs. Aquino to fire both Mr. Ongpin and her executive secretary, Joker Arroyo.
  15. The next morning, after the agreement was reached, Kenichiro Sasae, the Japanese Foreign Ministry's chief negotiator on the construction issue, denied that politics had bogged down the talks.
  16. Both the House and Senate have approved trade packages, but the conference committee that was established to iron out differences between the two versions has bogged down over congressional turf battles and the complexity of the legislation.
  17. A news report said the talks are bogged down over whether to authorize the buffer-stock manager to buy cocoa from non-member nations and whether to pay varying prices for different types of cocoa.
  18. The talks, however, bogged down after secret trips to the North by a South Korean dissident clergyman, a lawmaker and the student, Ms. Im.
  19. The inquiry says the agency was bogged down by paperwork and "became too much of a registry and too little of a watchdog at a time when the reverse was needed."
  20. After the March 23 preliminary accord, talks bogged down quickly over seemingly minor issues of how to implement the 60-day truce.
  21. "I tell prospective clients that they didn't go into business to keep books, and if they get bogged down with the daily work of keeping books they aren't doing what they do best," she says.
  22. PRESIDENT Bill Clinton's first 100 days in office bogged down disastrously in the struggle to pass his budget.
  23. But they bogged down over an amendment offered by Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., to delay some of the new catastrophic care provisions for the elderly under Medicare, including the surtax on people more than 65 years old designed to pay for the program.
  24. But the negotiations in Geneva and Vienna have been going slowly in recent weeks, bogged down by technical details.
  25. Several alliance officials say NATO's cumbersome internal bargaining process is becoming bogged down further as it strains to respond to Mr. Gorbachev's sweeping suggestions.
  26. Normalization talks opened in 1982, but they bogged down over three major obstacles: Moscow's support of Vietnam's nine-year occupation of Cambodia, Soviet troops in Afghanistan, and Soviet forces stationed along the Chinese border.
  27. So far, the unpleasant topic has been relegated to the closed-door budget summit, which is bogged down trying to slash the federal budget deficit.
  28. The stock market showed no clear trend today, bogged down in uncertainty after Tuesday's mild setback.
  29. The KIO will appeal, for the second time. The KIO's efforts coincide with indications that a civil writ issued against many of the same defendants in London is also likely to become bogged down in arguments over jurisdiction.
  30. "This is insurance that the American people can still have a trade bill this year," said Byrd, who argued that efforts to draft a new measure could become hopelessly bogged down in debate over complex amendments.
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