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 creep [kri:p]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 爬, 徐行, 蠕动

vi. 爬, 蔓延, 潜行

[化] 蠕变


  1. We crept upstairs so as not to wake the baby.
    为了不吵醒婴儿,我们蹑手蹑脚地上了楼梯。
  2. The cat was creeping silently towards the mouse.
    猫悄悄地朝着老鼠爬过去。
  3. Ivy had crept up the castle walls.
    常春藤爬上了城堡的围墙。


creep
crept
[ noun ]
  1. someone unpleasantly strange or eccentric

  2. <noun.person>
  3. a slow longitudinal movement or deformation

  4. <noun.event>
  5. a pen that is fenced so that young animals can enter but adults cannot

  6. <noun.artifact>
  7. a slow mode of locomotion on hands and knees or dragging the body

  8. <noun.act>
    a crawl was all that the injured man could manage
    the traffic moved at a creep
[ verb ]
  1. move slowly; in the case of people or animals with the body near the ground

  2. <verb.motion> crawl
    The crocodile was crawling along the riverbed
  3. to go stealthily or furtively

  4. <verb.motion>
    mouse pussyfoot sneak
    ..stead of sneaking around spying on the neighbor's house
  5. grow or spread, often in such a way as to cover (a surface)

  6. <verb.motion>
    ivy crept over the walls of the university buildings
  7. show submission or fear

  8. <verb.motion>
    cower crawl cringe fawn grovel


Creep \Creep\ (kr[=e]p), v. t. [imp. {Crept} (kr[e^]pt) ({Crope}
(kr[=o]p), Obs.); p. p. {Crept}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Creeping}.]
[OE. crepen, creopen, AS. cre['o]pan; akin to D. kruipen, G.
kriechen, Icel. krjupa, Sw. krypa, Dan. krybe. Cf. {Cripple},
{Crouch}.]
1. To move along the ground, or on any other surface, on the
belly, as a worm or reptile; to move as a child on the
hands and knees; to crawl.

Ye that walk
The earth, and stately tread, or lowly creep.
--Milton.

2. To move slowly, feebly, or timorously, as from
unwillingness, fear, or weakness.

The whining schoolboy . . . creeping, like snail,
Unwillingly to school. --Shak.

Like a guilty thing, I creep. --Tennyson.

3. To move in a stealthy or secret manner; to move
imperceptibly or clandestinely; to steal in; to insinuate
itself or one's self; as, age creeps upon us.

The sophistry which creeps into most of the books of
argument. --Locke.

Of this sort are they which creep into houses, and
lead captive silly women. --2. Tim. iii.
6.

4. To slip, or to become slightly displaced; as, the
collodion on a negative, or a coat of varnish, may creep
in drying; the quicksilver on a mirror may creep.

5. To move or behave with servility or exaggerated humility;
to fawn; as, a creeping sycophant.

To come as humbly as they used to creep. --Shak.

6. To grow, as a vine, clinging to the ground or to some
other support by means of roots or rootlets, or by
tendrils, along its length. ``Creeping vines.'' --Dryden.

7. To have a sensation as of insects creeping on the skin of
the body; to crawl; as, the sight made my flesh creep. See
{Crawl}, v. i., 4.

8. To drag in deep water with creepers, as for recovering a
submarine cable.


Creep \Creep\, n.
1. The act or process of creeping.

2. A distressing sensation, or sound, like that occasioned by
the creeping of insects.

A creep of undefinable horror. --Blackwood's
Mag.

Out of the stillness, with gathering creep,
Like rising wind in leaves. --Lowell.

3. (Mining) A slow rising of the floor of a gallery,
occasioned by the pressure of incumbent strata upon the
pillars or sides; a gradual movement of mining ground.

  1. With unemployment hovering near a 14-year low, wages have begun to creep higher and jobs have become a focal point for policy-making.
  2. While negotiations continue on their contract, talks between the union and Ford Motor Co. and Chrysler Corp. will creep ahead.
  3. Two of the best traditional 200-fish beats only managed to creep into double figures this year. Aided by Lar Kenny, a ghillie of 38 years experience, and others, I built up a portrait of woe.
  4. Michael Boskin, the president's chief economist, said Friday that the jobless rate could "creep a teeny bit higher" in the next few months, but predicted it will decline later in the year.
  5. He says that new technologies are allowing plastics makers to boost output steadily at existing sites, a condition known as "capacity creep."
  6. In 1969, the price of gold started to creep up, and an ounce of gold would command 13 barrels of oil.
  7. The UK equity market has had a lot to cope with this week: the upward creep in European interest rates, the further collapse of the Tokyo market and the unnerving hints of renewed hostilities between the US and Iraq.
  8. When they say no, the creep hires a thug to destroy the place.
  9. Stock prices managed to creep into positive territory Wednesday, as a strong start on Wall Street pulled London equities higher.
  10. After dipping in the early 1980s, the rate of population growth has begun to creep up again.
  11. If they desire ever more NHS expenditure, they should be ready to see the VAT rate creep up from 17 1/2 to 18, 19, 20 per cent and however much more it takes.
  12. And then the niggling doubts begin to creep in. Was the idea of reverie, with all that that word has come to connote of the quasi-mystical wedding of intellect, subjectivity and the unconscious mind, quite enough?
  13. But now they've started to creep back up again.'
  14. "Inflationary pressures on a worldwide basis aren't there," he said, adding that the recent "upward creep" of interest rates should not derail Group of Seven policies.
  15. Accordingly, industry analysts say, chip prices around the world have begun to creep up.
  16. Meanwhile, the death toll in the violence continued to creep up today as police said eight people were killed during a curfew break the day before.
  17. In a report published by the Northern Ireland Accounting Office last February, the IDB was criticised for allowing the level of government contributions to overall project costs to creep up from 21 per cent in 1990/91 to 27 per cent currently.
  18. Mr. Lee says he expects the unemployment rate to creep up to 6.3%, from January's 6.2%, but he doesn't see much change in the employment paryroll figures.
  19. What possessed you to allow that kind of tripe? I canceled my Washington Post subscription after five years of watching female chauvinism creep off the Style page onto the editorial page and then the front page.
  20. Louisiana's first hydroelectric plant will creep upriver at 2 to 4 mph, meaning a trip of two to four days, according to Merrimac Corp., which commissioned the $500 million project.
  21. If you're the consumer the word bland may creep into your over-heated brain: the memory of drinking defrosted beer from the fridge lingers around the taste buds. My own judgment is that the lack of after-taste does make ice beer very smooth.
  22. He predicts that the company will earn $2.40 a share, or $585 million, this year and that its earnings will continue to creep higher for at least the next three years.
  23. The market spent the morning drifting at lower levels until the upward creep of the Commodity Research Bureau's futures price index sparked a sell-off of stock-index futures, and an accompanying surge of program selling in the cash market.
  24. If the Ewing soprano is not exactly an Isolde instrument, it soars confidently over the orchestral waves in the final monologue. The controversial vocal tricks that she likes to exploit are used here to colour passages that aptly make one's skin creep.
  25. Almost all of the newspaper company stocks have started to creep back up recently.
  26. Carson City musician John Powers sued after Joel called him "a creep" and "a poor little schlump" and said he would like "to break his legs with my own hands" in a 1982 Playboy magazine interview.
  27. Traffic stareted returning to normal Thursday, but cars and trucks had to creep around potholes, dislodged paving stones and rubble left behind from the barricades and fires that filled the streets during three days of disturbances.
  28. Cars, trucks, buses and cranes creep slowly day and night up the narrow, winding roads across the Caucasus range to the stricken area about 50 miles away.
  29. It is pointless, it is insincere, its Jesus story here is virtually stripped of plot, and Jesus himself becomes (a) a joyless wimp and (b) a pontificating creep. And - worst crime in a musical - the songs are sold short.
  30. Congress, complaining about what it calls "grade creep," imposed the cap of 1,073 active-duty slots for generals and admirals in 1981.
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