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 grip [grip]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 紧握, 柄, 握力, 握手方式, 手提包, 掌握, 支配, 控制

vt. 抓紧, 抱住, 吸住, 掌握

vi. 握牢, 有吸引力

[医] 流行性感冒, 流感, 握


  1. The brake doesn't grip properly.
    刹车不灵了。
  2. We'll come to grips with the problem very soon.
    我们将很快处理这个问题。
  3. The frightened child gripped his mother's arm.
    这个受惊的孩子紧紧地抓着妈妈的胳膊。


grip
gripped, gripping, gript
[ noun ]
  1. the act of grasping

  2. <noun.act>
    he released his clasp on my arm
    he has a strong grip for an old man
    she kept a firm hold on the railing
  3. the appendage to an object that is designed to be held in order to use or move it

  4. <noun.artifact>
    he grabbed the hammer by the handle
    it was an old briefcase but it still had a good grip
  5. a portable rectangular container for carrying clothes

  6. <noun.artifact>
    he carried his small bag onto the plane with him
  7. the friction between a body and the surface on which it moves (as between an automobile tire and the road)

  8. <noun.phenomenon>
  9. worker who moves the camera around while a film or television show is being made

  10. <noun.person>
  11. an intellectual hold or understanding

  12. <noun.attribute>
    a good grip on French history
    they kept a firm grip on the two top priorities
    he was in the grip of a powerful emotion
    a terrible power had her in its grasp
  13. a flat wire hairpin whose prongs press tightly together; used to hold bobbed hair in place

  14. <noun.artifact>
    in Britain they call a bobby pin a grip
[ verb ]
  1. hold fast or firmly

  2. <verb.contact>
    He gripped the steering wheel
  3. to grip or seize, as in a wrestling match

  4. <verb.contact> grapple
    the two men grappled with each other for several minutes
  5. to render motionless, as with a fixed stare or by arousing terror or awe

  6. <verb.emotion>
    fascinate spellbind transfix
    The snake charmer fascinates the cobra


Grip \Grip\, n. [L. gryps, gryphus. See {Griffin}, {Grype}.]
(Zo["o]l.)
The griffin. [Obs.]


Grip \Grip\, n. [Cf. AS. grip furrow, hitch, D. greb.]
A small ditch or furrow. --Ray.


Grip \Grip\, v. t.
To trench; to drain.


Grip \Grip\, n. [AS. gripe. Cf. {Grip}, v. t., {Gripe}, v. t.]
1. An energetic or tenacious grasp; a holding fast; strength
in grasping.

2. A peculiar mode of clasping the hand, by which members of
a secret association recognize or greet, one another; as,
a masonic grip.

3. That by which anything is grasped; a handle or gripe; as,
the grip of a sword.

4. A device for grasping or holding fast to something.

5. Specif., an apparatus attached to a car for clutching a
traction cable.
[Webster 1913 Suppl.]

6. A gripsack; a hand bag; a satchel or suitcase. [Colloq.]
[Webster 1913 Suppl. +PJC]

7. (Med.) The influenza; grippe.
[Webster 1913 Suppl.]


Grip \Grip\, v. t. [From {Grip} a grasp; or P. gripper to seize;
-- of German origin. See {Gripe}, v. t.]
To give a grip to; to grasp; to gripe.

  1. Addressing a Lithuanian festival, Bush challenged the Soviet Union to make good on its reforms toward openness by relaxing its grip on the nations it occupied after World War II.
  2. Richard J. Daley, who controlled a political army through patronage jobs and earned the moniker "Boss" for his iron-fisted grip on both local and national politics, served as Chicago's mayor from 1955 until his death in 1976.
  3. The last act, which crowns Il Trovatore as a great melodrama, should exercise a steady, relentless grip, but here it was disappointingly choppy and sectional.
  4. He was a hypersensitive man unable to bring together the male and female components of his personality, and in the grip of a terror of losing the boundaries of self'.
  5. It is simply too diffuse to grip the reader, with overly detailed descriptions of military hardware, meandering pace and Ng's flat narration combining to bog the story down.
  6. In the 1960s and 1970s, Rep. Brooks similarly pushed for computer-industry competition through legislation that effectively loosened International Business Machines Corp.'s grip on government computers.
  7. Its US rivals, by contrast, have first call on anyone who wants to fly onwards within the US. US carriers argued that BA had too strong a grip on the landing rights at Europe's most important gateway, London's Heathrow airport.
  8. Capturing the hospital offers the government both strategic and psychological advantages in trying to loosen the Tamil rebels' grip on the town.
  9. The stock market broke out of its downward spiral yesterday, but fear continued to grip Wall Street as stock prices bounced around in extremely heavy, volatile trading.
  10. Mr. Wood suggests, in his introduction to the book accompanying the series, that "film is the true successor of the Greek mimetic revolution, and the West is still in the grip of that obsession with the illusion of reality in art."
  11. Few voters have a firmer grip on the national imagination than the blue-denimed, taciturn farmers who file in here.
  12. There are plenty in the Tory party who lament the 'lack of grip' in 10 Downing Street.
  13. Anthony Michaels-Moore did good service as Creon and the Messenger; the BBC Symphony Chorus had been well drilled. The firm grip on the conductor's baton that kept the Stravinsky taut was also brought to bear upon the Strauss.
  14. That could enable Gorbachev to take an even firmer grip on power by assuming a stronger presidency while retaining the party leadership.
  15. While the recession extends its grip on the world there will be no substantial improvement in the fortunes of the salerooms.
  16. If you don't believe me, test it with colleagues. Having taught you that you can stop a throttler in that way, I'll explain why it works. His grip depends on just the power of his hands and shoulders.
  17. Banks are finally taking a firm grip on the IT toolbox.
  18. Global competition is likely to force companies to keep a firm grip on prices and wages, Mr. Annable predicted.
  19. Dukakis is looking for a fourth straight big-state win here over his surviving competitor _ Jesse Jackson _ to tighten his grip on the front-runner's crown and widen his margin in the delegate count.
  20. The drop in the funds rate during the past few weeks has aroused speculation that the Federal Reserve may have loosened its credit grip just a bit.
  21. Mr. Hammer, 52, who was recruited in 1985 from a top job at Chase Manhattan Corp. to clean up the mess at Meritor, has struggled for three years to get a grip on its persistent problems.
  22. Most Namibians condemned the actions and said they show South Africa intends to maintain a firm grip on the territory it has administered since capturing it from Germany in 1915.
  23. It may therefore become the next target of ambitious politicians, though the men from the MoF will certainly put up more of a fight than did the Miti men across the road in Kasumigaseki. 'Are we losing our grip?'
  24. But it was an upstart center-left coalition led by PRI-defector Cuauhtemoc Cardenas that loosened the PRI's tight grip on power in Mexico for 59 years.
  25. Solidarity editor Tadeusz Mazowiecki declared Friday that he is ready to accept President Wojciech Jaruzelski's offer to nominate him as prime minister and break the Communist grip on power in Poland.
  26. Its grip made it impossible for Koito to seek other, more profitable markets, he says.
  27. Saddam came to power in 1979 and gradually tightened the grip of his ruling Baath Socialist Party.
  28. They say the Desario promotion gives Mr Fazio a tight grip on monetary policy.
  29. It took me longer to get a grip on my character than the other actors.
  30. His daughter Roseana is expected to win the race for governor in October. Mr Gastao Dias Vieira, a local politician critical of the ruling classes says attempts to modernise the state have failed because of the elite's grip on power.
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