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 cruise [kruz]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 巡航, 巡弋, 漫游

vt. 巡航, 巡弋, 漫游

vi. 巡航, 巡弋, 漫游


  1. Several privateer often cruise near the entrance of the channel.
    几只武装民船经常在这个海峡的进口附近巡航。
  2. These cruise ships can turn round in two days.
    这些游船可用两天的时间装卸完毕.
  3. I go cruise with a friend.
    我和朋友开车兜风。


cruise
[ noun ]
  1. an ocean trip taken for pleasure

  2. <noun.act>
[ verb ]
  1. drive around aimlessly but ostentatiously and at leisure

  2. <verb.motion>
    She cruised the neighborhood in her new convertible
  3. travel at a moderate speed

  4. <verb.motion>
    Please keep your seat belt fastened while the plane is reaching cruising altitude
  5. look for a sexual partner in a public place

  6. <verb.perception>
    The men were cruising the park
  7. sail or travel about for pleasure, relaxation, or sightseeing

  8. <verb.motion>
    We were cruising in the Caribbean


Cruise \Cruise\, v. t.
1. To cruise over or about.
[Webster 1913 Suppl.]

2. (Forestry) To explore with reference to capacity for the
production of lumber; as, to cruise a section of land.
[Webster 1913 Suppl.]


Cruise \Cruise\ (kr[udd]s), n.
See {Cruse}, a small bottle.


Cruise \Cruise\ (kr[udd]z), v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Cruised}
(kr[udd]zd); p. pr. & vb. n. {Cruising}.] [D. kruisen to move
crosswise or in a zigzag, to cruise, fr. kruis cross, fr. OF.
crois, croiz, F. croix, or directly fr. OF. croisier, F.
croiser, to cross, cruise, fr. crois a cross. See {Cross}.]
1. To sail back and forth on the ocean; to sail, as for the
protection of commerce, in search of an enemy, for
plunder, or for pleasure.

Note: A ship cruises in any particular sea or ocean; as, in
the Baltic or in the Atlantic. She cruises off any
cape; as, off the Lizard; off Ushant. She cruises on a
coast; as, on the coast of Africa. A pirate cruises to
seize vessels; a yacht cruises for the pleasure of the
owner.

Ships of war were sent to cruise near the isle of
Bute. --Macaulay.

'Mid sands, and rocks, and storms to cruise for
pleasure. --Young.

2. To wander hither and thither on land. [Colloq.]

3. (Forestry) To inspect forest land for the purpose of
estimating the quantity of lumber it will yield.
[Webster 1913 Suppl.]

4. To travel primarily for pleasure, or without any fixed
purpose, rather than with the main goal of reaching a
particular destination. To cruise the streets of town,
looking for an interesting party to crash.
[PJC]


Cruise \Cruise\, n.
1. A voyage made in various directions, as of an armed
vessel, for the protection of other vessels, or in search
of an enemy; a sailing to and fro, as for exploration or
for pleasure.

He feigned a compliance with some of his men, who
were bent upon going a cruise to Manilla. --Dampier.

2. Hence: A voyage aboard a ship, in which the activities on
the ship itself form a major objective of the voyage; --
used particularly of vacation voyages, or voyages during
which some special activity occurs on board the ship, such
as a series of seminars.
[PJC]

  1. He took his ministers on a cruise around Manila Bay in an apparent bid to quash reports of schisms between power blocs in his seven-week-old government.
  2. Separately, the Navy announced that the Convair division of General Dynamics Corp. has been selected to manufacture 70% of the Tomahawk sea-launched and ground-launched cruise missiles to be ordered in fiscal 1988, which began Oct. 1.
  3. The treaty also provides for destruction of ground-launched cruise missiles and their launchers at Davis-Monthan Air Force Base near Tucson, Ariz., said Ms. Franklin.
  4. They were staying in the rollicking French Quarter, and Alice and Howard Frazier of Woodmont, Conn., who organized the peace cruise, said they expected a full night of indulgence.
  5. The stealth version of the cruise missile is supposed to be even more impervious to detection, while also offering greater range.
  6. The release of the photo of the stealth cruise, known formally as the Advanced Cruise Missile, or AGM-129A, is the third such move in 10 months.
  7. Concern over the lead appears to have subsided in Skagway as it prepares for summer, which every year brings thousands of tourists on cruise ships and day excursions from Juneau, 92 miles to the south.
  8. The ship's Phalanx gun, designed to hurl a storm of radar-guided shells at an incoming cruise missile, was on automatic, and its own missiles and Stinger anti-aircraft teams were ready to fire.
  9. The administration is resisting this, and also insisting on retaining more air-launched cruise missiles than the Soviets have proposed.
  10. I have looked up a few prices for you. Next Saturday, the Queen leaves Venice on a 14-day cruise to Monaco.
  11. The cruise, part of the Navy's campaign to recruit sailors, will send the Antrim to 21 ports over three months.
  12. At a separate news conference, Merchant Marine minister Evangelos Yannopoulos said security had been boosted at all main ports and that commandoes would now be permanent crew members of cruise liners.
  13. And the Soviets want to include limits on sea-launched cruise missiles in a Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty now under negotiation.
  14. In a speech in Berlin on Wednesday, Reagan said West Germany's agreement in the early 1980s to accept nuclear-tipped cruise missile bases was a major turning point in pressing Moscow to accept a new European order.
  15. "But I part company with him over his opposition to such mainstays of our national defense as the F-15 and the cruise missile," Gore said. "I categorically reject his notion that there's a moral equivalence between Israel and the PLO.
  16. Its houses are as mobile as the boats that cruise its main thoroughfares.
  17. The teams say that these insects cruise in layers 500 to 5,000 feet above ground.
  18. Other proposed theories of sudden acceleration, such as problems with the cruise control or electronic idle speed control systems, failed to meet the test of an open throttle while the brakes are applied, NHTSA said.
  19. Spivey, in a recent interview, said his followers began citizen patrols about eight months ago, splitting up in teams of five to cruise crime-ridden areas.
  20. Lillian Finnegan, daughter of a Genoa judge, started the event after seeing a shipboard fund-raiser during a sea cruise.
  21. "The bomber gives you flexibility," said Rep. Norman Dicks, D-Wash. "You can't do it with cruise missiles because many of those (Soviet) targets are mobile targets.
  22. So are cruise missiles carried by planes and warships.
  23. Here's what happens in a typical episode of "The Street": Two cops, Peluso (Bruce MacVittie) and Scolari (Stanley Tucci), cruise the crummy streets of downtown Newark.
  24. The inside is littered with cultural icons of wealth and prestige: a cruise ship, a Daimler, a wedding in Paris and champagne.
  25. Nine other preliminary evaluations were opened by the agency into: _Erratic cruise control in about 10,000 1987 Chrysler Jeep Cherokees.
  26. "Our entertainment on board is mostly intellectual entertainment, not gambling and dancing," Peter Cox, planning director for the cruise operator, said late last week.
  27. Reagan retaliated for a terrorist bombing in West Germany with an air strike against Libya's Col. Moammar Gadhafi, whom he called "the mad dog of the Middle East." Terrorists hijacked airplanes and a cruise ship.
  28. "Designing a regime to verify the effective limitation of sea-launched cruise missile (SLCM) deployment is an extremely tough problem.
  29. Vard warned that its cruise business could be heading for an overall loss in 1993.
  30. And fuel costs are proportionally much lower for the cruise industry, he said, than for others in the travel business, such as airlines.
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