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 carve [kɑ:v]   添加此单词到默认生词本
vt. 雕刻, 切开

vi. 雕刻, 切开


  1. He carved me some very nice pieces of chicken.
    他为我切了几块很好的鸡肉。
  2. The statue was carved out of marble.
    这座雕像是用大理石雕刻的。
  3. Would you like to carve?
    你喜欢切片吃吗?


carve
[ verb ]
  1. form by carving

  2. <verb.contact>
    Carve a flower from the ice
  3. engrave or cut by chipping away at a surface

  4. <verb.contact> chip at
    carve one's name into the bark
  5. cut to pieces

  6. <verb.contact>
    cut up
    Father carved the ham


Carve \Carve\, v. i.
1. To exercise the trade of a sculptor or carver; to engrave
or cut figures.

2. To cut up meat; as, to carve for all the guests.


Carve \Carve\, n.
A carucate. [Obs.] --Burrill.


Carve \Carve\ (k[aum]rv), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Carved}
(k[aum]rvd); p. pr. & vb. n. {Carving}.] [AS. ceorfan to cut,
carve; akin to D. kerven, G. kerben, Dan. karve, Sw. karfva,
and to Gr. gra`fein to write, orig. to scratch, and E.
-graphy. Cf. {Graphic}.]
1. To cut. [Obs.]

Or they will carven the shepherd's throat.
--Spenser.

2. To cut, as wood, stone, or other material, in an artistic
or decorative manner; to sculpture; to engrave.

Carved with figures strange and sweet. --Coleridge.

3. To make or shape by cutting, sculpturing, or engraving; to
form; as, to carve a name on a tree.

An angel carved in stone. --Tennyson.

We carved not a line, and we raised not a stone.
--C. Wolfe.

4. To cut into small pieces or slices, as meat at table; to
divide for distribution or apportionment; to apportion.
``To carve a capon.'' --Shak.

5. To cut: to hew; to mark as if by cutting.

My good blade carved the casques of men. --Tennyson.

A million wrinkles carved his skin. --Tennyson.

6. To take or make, as by cutting; to provide.

Who could easily have carved themselves their own
food. --South.

7. To lay out; to contrive; to design; to plan.

Lie ten nights awake carving the fashion of a new
doublet. --Shak.

{To carve out}, to make or get by cutting, or as if by
cutting; to cut out. ``[Macbeth] with his brandished steel
. . . carved out his passage.'' --Shak.

Fortunes were carved out of the property of the
crown. --Macaulay.

  1. If they continue to view politics as about little more than carving up the spoils, they may soon have no spoils left to carve. A foreign empire could be relatively centralised.
  2. "Come carve my name in stone immortal, "I know the turtoise (sic) is a tortle (sic).
  3. But Pepsi officials say their aim is to stimulate demand to double its present size and carve out a share of the increased market.
  4. They plan to fly on to Belgrade for talks with the Serbian government and then to Zagreb, the Croatian capital. Lord Carrington said it appeared Serbia was trying to carve out a Serbian enclave in Bosnia.
  5. Croatia and Serbia have tried to carve up Bosnia,' he added. British officials said that the conference chairmen were not intending to establish pre-conditions for attending.
  6. And should Hughes win, the Los Angeles company would almost certainly carve out and pass on Ford Aerospace's satellite business to Alcatel, a telecommunications venture of ITT Corp. and Compagnie Generale d'Electricite.
  7. But others predict EJV, which stands for Electronic Joint Venture, eventually will carve a lucrative niche in parts of the huge government-bond brokerage business, where trading volume often exceeds $100 billion a day.
  8. Home Minister Buta Singh, whose ministry is responsible for internal security, told reporters the government would carve out a 100-yard corridor around the temple complex to try to keep extremists from using the shrine as a hideout.
  9. Because basalt is difficult to carve and expensive, the stone was reserved for royal use, often as flooring for sacred places.
  10. This argues that the UK newspaper market is in terminal decline, and that Mr Murdoch and Mr Black are out to drive weaker competitors to the wall and carve up what is left of the market between them. The second we might call the football thesis.
  11. At the time, there were high hopes that Mr. Coats, known on Wall Street as a talented and aggressive bond trader, would carve out a niche for the Japanese bank in the U.S. government bond market.
  12. They want to carve out their own autonomous region, loyal to Moscow instead of Kishinev, the Moldavian capital.
  13. Ke Kim Yan said up to 450 Khmer Rouge guerrillas were trying to carve out a "liberated zone" around Pailin, and had intensified 120mm mortar shelling, firing up to 2,000 rounds a day.
  14. And tenants could carve out a small kid's room by subdividing the master bedroom and still have two windowed rooms that would meet building codes.
  15. PKK is a Marxist terrorist group that aims to carve a communist state out of eastern Turkey.
  16. Some entrepreneurs are hoping to carve out a market for digital audio carried over the unused portions of a cable TV system's wires.
  17. In the absence of a consensus on how to carve up OPEC's production share to please all the countries, a plan was announced to simply bump up the supply ceiling from 19.5 million barrels a day to 20.5 million barrels in the October-December period.
  18. A horn also gave a bored and homesick soldier something to carve on during long days of idleness.
  19. But the overseas competition doesn't worry R&H Food Enterprises Inc., which is exploiting it's product's cost advantages to carve a niche in the market.
  20. Cards now display a range of design techniques and there is a wealth of choice. According to Christopher Cordingly, of Art Angels Publishers: 'It is a heavily populated industry in which you have to carve your own niche.'
  21. The Germans will have 51 per cent of the Dollars 105m venture. Mercedes aims to carve out up to 30 per cent of the truck market in eastern Europe - the same as it has in the west.
  22. A spokesman for Financial said the transaction is being undertaken to "carve out a higher profile" for the trust, which has assets of $3.1 billion (Canadian).
  23. Officials hoped to use the barge to carve a 40-foot path to open water and freedom for the whales.
  24. For one of the world-scale players to carve itself up in this way is without precedent. But ICI is in the mood for radical solutions.
  25. His sons set off with T.E. Lawrence on the military adventures so romantically depicted in the film, "Lawrence of Arabia." In secret, however, Britain and France crafted a scheme to carve up the Arab world between them.
  26. Fearing developers would carve up the property and sell it off for commercial and residential ventures, the City Council voted in August 1987 to declare the Ambassador a historic monument.
  27. Machines carve trenches inside the airport and along a barren ridge that overlooks the runway, and is overlooked in turn by mountains where the Moslem fighters wait and occasionally fire rockets at the airport or city.
  28. The minister, Hisham Nazer, stressed that Saudi Arabia would strive to carve out a growing share of the world petrochemical market.
  29. A proposal to carve out a new Mojave County from the eastern, desert portions of San Bernardino County, the nation's largest, was trailing by nearly 2-1 in returns from absentee voters.
  30. Escalating prices in a number of frenzied takeover battles this year have caused rival predators to join forces to carve up their common prey.
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