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 bold [bold]   添加此单词到默认生词本
a. 大胆的

n. 粗体

[计] 粗体


  1. May I be so bold as to ask how old you are?
    可否冒昧问一下您多大年纪?
  2. He is a bold thinker, with lots of original ideas.
    他是个敢于思考的人,富有创新观点。
  3. You are so bold that you never do something on second thought.
    你太鲁莽, 从来不知道深思熟虑后做事。


bold
[ noun ]
  1. a typeface with thick heavy lines

  2. <noun.communication>
[ adj ]
  1. fearless and daring

  2. <adj.all>
    bold settlers on some foreign shore
    a bold speech
    a bold adventure
  3. clear and distinct

  4. <adj.all>
    bold handwriting
    a figure carved in bold relief
    a bold design
  5. very steep; having a prominent and almost vertical front

  6. <adj.all>
    a bluff headland
    where the bold chalk cliffs of England rise
    a sheer descent of rock


Bold \Bold\ (b[=o]ld), a. [OE. bald, bold, AS. bald, beald; akin
to Icel. ballr, OHG. bald, MHG. balt, D. boud, Goth.
bal[thorn]ei boldness, It. baldo. In Ger. there remains only
bald, adv. soon. Cf. {Bawd}, n.]
1. Forward to meet danger; venturesome; daring; not timorous
or shrinking from risk; brave; courageous.

Throngs of knights and barons bold. --Milton.

2. Exhibiting or requiring spirit and contempt of danger;
planned with courage; daring; vigorous. ``The bold design
leased highly.'' --Milton.

3. In a bad sense, too forward; taking undue liberties; over
assuming or confident; lacking proper modesty or
restraint; rude; impudent.

Thou art too wild, too rude and bold of voice.
--Shak.

4. Somewhat overstepping usual bounds, or conventional rules,
as in art, literature, etc.; taking liberties in
composition or expression; as, the figures of an author
are bold. ``Bold tales.'' --Waller.

The cathedral church is a very bold work. --Addison.

5. Standing prominently out to view; markedly conspicuous;
striking the eye; in high relief.

Shadows in painting . . . make the figure bolder.
--Dryden.

6. Steep; abrupt; prominent.

Where the bold cape its warning forehead rears.
--Trumbull.


Bold \Bold\, v. t.
To make bold or daring. [Obs.] --Shak.


Bold \Bold\, v. i.
To be or become bold. [Obs.]

  1. But now the bold, young Mr. Salinas has come along.
  2. That seems too bold.
  3. Lisa Speer, an attorney with the Natural Resources Defense Council in New York, said, "A delay would have been a bold stroke before the Exxon Valdez.
  4. Would you believe a bold new attempt to break the record for the world's longest conga line?
  5. His story is one of the dramatic accounts told Tuesday night at a reunion of the more than 100 soldiers and former hostages involved in Israel's bold rescue of the civilian captives.
  6. As they do, however, a Chinese soldier perched high atop a roof overlooking the square quietly photographs any Tibetan bold enough to go up to the visitors.
  7. "You can't be confident of a bold move one way or the other in these markets until the new year," said Charles Christensen, a futures analyst with Refco Group Ltd., Chicago.
  8. Great Western Bank, the nation's second-largest healthy thrift, unveiled a bold attempt to escape from the insolvent Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corp. and switch into the healthier Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.
  9. Record inflation has given South American leaders the political leverage to take bold economic measures.
  10. Software Link Inc. is more bold.
  11. Nor by bold speeches; Japan's cautious leaders still refer to the issue only in oblique terms.
  12. If Mr. Dukakis wants to be bold in leading this nation, why can't he start by making a bold choice for the vice presidency?
  13. If Mr. Dukakis wants to be bold in leading this nation, why can't he start by making a bold choice for the vice presidency?
  14. Grant and LeMasters were the architects of a bold bid this season to revive CBS's sagging ratings; the network replaced eight of its 22 hours of weekly prime-time programming, the most ever for CBS.
  15. Castle & Cooke's participation in a bid also would be consistent with the style of its chairman, David H. Murdock, who is known as a bold buyer and seller of businesses.
  16. If we expected to be applauded for linking in such a bold and direct manner shareholder value with executive compensation, we were mistaken.
  17. William Osler, a showman with high forehead and the bold mustache of a pirate, was in his element.
  18. What would be the fallout from such a bold initiative taken by private industry?
  19. The participants had to choose "between doing a bold package of deficit reduction or simply avoiding sequestration," which is the technical term for the automatic cuts, said Rep. Leon Panetta (D., Calif.).
  20. 'Ukraine has taken a bold move away from the nuclear precipice,' he said.
  21. "When the time came, Hungary was bold enough to open a hole in the Iron Curtain," said Catherine Lalumiere, secretary-general of the council.
  22. "They're really bold and brassy.
  23. It is a bold addition to the repertory, and, as I have mentioned, is danced with grand assurance by its cast.
  24. But it may take just such a bold move to restore the dollar's strength, some analysts reply.
  25. The Chanel look got a nice update with bold stitching instead of piping and lots of diagonal pockets for a swinging look.
  26. Administration officials dismiss West European warnings of bold Soviet proposals on conventional weaponry or tactical nuclear weapons, but worry that the U.S. will be ill-prepared if they come.
  27. With lots of bold (and flattering) stripes they sell at about Pounds 60 each and for the moment can only be bought from Bodyworks, 40 King's Road, London SW3.
  28. In the world of politics he was similarly bold, sometimes betraying a naive understanding of political correctness.
  29. It's very bold of the Journal to define the participation in pornography as an arts or leisure activity.
  30. But there in bold and no uncertain print it says it is not rude.
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