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 carving ['kɑrvɪŋ]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 雕刻品, 雕刻, 雕刻术

  1. A carving of great antiquity.
    年代久远的雕刻作品
  2. She's an ace at carving.
    她是个雕刻能手。
  3. The art of creating or decorating objects of wood by carving with a sharp, hand-held tool.
    木雕通过用手持的锋利工具雕刻而创造或装饰木制品的艺术


carving
[ noun ]
  1. a sculpture created by removing material (as wood or ivory or stone) in order to create a desired shape

  2. <noun.artifact>
  3. removing parts from hard material to create a desired pattern or shape

  4. <noun.act>
  5. creating figures or designs in three dimensions

  6. <noun.act>


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.


Carving \Carv"ing\, n.
1. The act or art of one who carves.

2. A piece of decorative work cut in stone, wood, or other
material. ``Carving in wood.'' --Sir W. Temple.

3. The whole body of decorative sculpture of any kind or
epoch, or in any material; as, the Italian carving of the
15th century.

  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. There is the challenge of carving out a different niche from dozens of other Olympic sponsors.
  3. The oldest mazes include a rock carving dated 1700 BC in Sardinia and a 13th century pavement at Chartres Cathedral.
  4. Secondly, the racer gains extra leverage in turning the ski; the tilting of the boot is transmitted more into a carving effect at the ski's edges. Racers are now fitting riser pads to take their boots even higher.
  5. It is believed the carving was a kind of calendar, with the rocks arranged to cast distinctive patterns of light and shadow across it on important days of the year.
  6. Maruti, the Indian carmaker in which Suzuki holds 40 per cent, is carving out a niche in southern Europe with a car that is a clone of the Suzuki Alto.
  7. 'Mr Benjamin Allen fell fast asleep: while Mr Bob Sawyer abstracted his thoughts from wordly matters by the ingenious process of carving his name on the seat of the pew.'
  8. The pre-dawn tornado caused widespread damage in the little town of Jarrell, 40 miles north of Austin, when it stayed on the ground for about seven miles, carving a mile-wide path of destruction.
  9. In their place, he said, brokers may find themselves acting as little more than the trading arm of a powerful bank, or operating on the fringes as a "boutique" agency, carving out a small niche in the market.
  10. Birmingham, Ala.: The unusual situation in Birmingham vividly illustrates the divisive consequences of carving out safe districts for racial minorities.
  11. The carving would also be done in the round, a three-dimensional undertaking that could be seen from all directions.
  12. Stonehouse said he tried to acknowledge the geopolitical change by carving a hole in his wall after the real one opened last November.
  13. Students of Thomas Jefferson College got credit for some unusual activities _ carving Indian flutes, painting portraits of comic-book characters and observing the antics of roving bands of mongrel dogs.
  14. The carving of a Hindu god arrived aboard a flight from Chicago and was to be placed at the Phnom Rong temple in the northeastern province of Buri Ram.
  15. Surrounded by paper makers doing complex laminations, printmakers carving intricate designs into woodblocks, and bookmakers spending what seemed like days on a single book cover, I had to fight the urge to get complicated.
  16. But Parrish and her partners, Roxie Kelly and Shelly Reeves-Smith, are serious about carving their own niche in a market ruled by huge corporations.
  17. Gluing blocks of wood together and roughly shaping them with chisels is followed by the tedium of carving the feathers, detailing each down to the space between the barbs.
  18. Though Isetan, with $30 billion in annual sales, has plenty of experience merchandising apparel, household goods and food, with Barneys it is carving out a new niche for itself: selling clothes to the affluent and urbane customer.
  19. With little advertising and less fanfare, the Ford Probe is speeding through dealer showrooms, keeping most buyers waiting at least six weeks for delivery of a car that is carving its own market niche.
  20. Eli Broad, chairman of Kaufman & Broad Inc., eats in because "carving out two hours for lunch isn't an efficient use of time."
  21. In carving up the Drexel assets, the plan allows for more than $2 billion to be distributed among the firm's thousands of creditors and other claimants.
  22. Some Thais said the carving had been "stolen" by the United States.
  23. Austrian Airlines is carving itself a niche as a gateway to the once-communist countries of eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union.
  24. GM and Ford said they were continuing cost-cutting programs. Also on Thursday, Chrysler announced a cost-cutting program aimed at carving $1 billion from its $26 billion budget during the next 15 months.
  25. For centuries, the twisting Mississippi has straightened and shortened itself by carving "cutoffs" that eliminate bends.
  26. He swapped axes and salt for autopsy rights, dissecting one victim with a carving knife by lantern-light in a native hut during a howling storm, according to his letters home.
  27. We're trying to help the community." Millie Medina spun a lemon mousse cake on a pedestal, smoothing the buttercream, carving a design on the side and piping sophisticated swirls onto the top.
  28. The effect is visible through a shop window in the "Ivory City" of Erbach, Germany, where Graf Franz of Erbach began carving ivory in 1783, and where the ivory business survives by the skin of its teeth.
  29. Some of Mr. Chirac's backers favor pre-election pacts with the National Front, carving out certain safe constituencies for each party.
  30. One of the toys, which he began carving last July, was an auto that could double as a jewelry box because of its compartments.
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