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 lurch [lә:tʃ]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 惨败, 倾斜, 挫折, 举步蹒跚, 徘徊

vi. 惨败, 倾斜, 徘徊

vt. 击败




    lurch
    [ noun ]
    1. an unsteady uneven gait

    2. <noun.act>
    3. a decisive defeat in a game (especially in cribbage)

    4. <noun.event>
    5. abrupt up-and-down motion (as caused by a ship or other conveyance)

    6. <noun.act>
      the pitching and tossing was quite exciting
    7. the act of moving forward suddenly

    8. <noun.act>
    [ verb ]
    1. walk as if unable to control one's movements

    2. <verb.motion> careen keel reel stagger swag
      The drunken man staggered into the room
    3. move abruptly

    4. <verb.motion>
      pitch shift
      The ship suddenly lurched to the left
    5. move slowly and unsteadily

    6. <verb.motion>
      The truck lurched down the road
    7. loiter about, with no apparent aim

    8. <verb.stative>
      prowl
    9. defeat by a lurch

    10. <verb.competition>
      skunk


    Lurch \Lurch\, v. i. [L. lurcare, lurcari.]
    To swallow or eat greedily; to devour; hence, to swallow up.
    [Obs.]

    Too far off from great cities, which may hinder
    business; too near them, which lurcheth all provisions,
    and maketh everything dear. --Bacon.


    Lurch \Lurch\, n. [OF. lourche name of a game; as adj.,
    deceived, embarrassed.]
    1. An old game played with dice and counters; a variety of
    the game of tables.

    2. A double score in cribbage for the winner when his
    adversary has been left in the lurch.

    Lady --- has cried her eyes out on losing a lurch.
    --Walpole.

    {To leave one in the lurch}.
    (a) In the game of cribbage, to leave one's adversary so
    far behind that the game is won before he has scored
    thirty-one.
    (b) To leave one behind; hence, to abandon, or fail to
    stand by, a person in a difficulty. --Denham.

    But though thou'rt of a different church,
    I will not leave thee in the lurch. --Hudibras.


    Lurch \Lurch\ (l[^u]rch), v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Lurched}
    (l[^u]rcht); p. pr. & vb. n. {Lurching}.]
    To roll or sway suddenly to one side, as a ship or a drunken
    man; to move forward while lurching.
    [1913 Webster +PJC]


    Lurch \Lurch\, v. i. [A variant of lurk.]
    1. To withdraw to one side, or to a private place; to lurk.
    --L'Estrange.

    2. To dodge; to shift; to play tricks.

    I . . . am fain to shuffle, to hedge, and to lurch.
    --Shak.


    Lurch \Lurch\, v. t.
    1. To leave in the lurch; to cheat. [Obs.]

    Never deceive or lurch the sincere communicant.
    --South.

    2. To steal; to rob. [Obs.]

    And in the brunt of seventeen battles since
    He lurched all swords of the garland. --Shak.


    Lurch \Lurch\, n. [Cf. W. llerch, llerc, a frisk, a frisking
    backward or forward, a loitering, a lurking, a lurking,
    llercian, llerciaw, to be idle, to frisk; or perh. fr. E.
    lurch to lurk.]
    A sudden roll of a ship to one side, as in heavy weather;
    hence, a swaying or staggering movement to one side, as that
    by a drunken man. Fig.: A sudden and capricious inclination
    of the mind.

    1. Rather, it appears to have thickened with each downward lurch of the Dow.
    2. When American Continental, which is headed by Arizona businessman Charles H. Keating Jr., filed for protection under the bankruptcy law, it left some 22,000 small investors who had purchased nearly $200 million in corporate bonds in the lurch.
    3. But after a mid-campaign lurch into the arms of the Euro-sceptics he has moderated his rhetoric. By yesterday, the multi-speed Europe first conjured up by Mr Douglas Hurd was not, after all, an excuse to opt out of everything European.
    4. The Agriculture Department is sympathetic to the desire of farmers to sell grain to the Soviets, while State Department officials want to show their support for the Soviet Union's lurch toward democracy.
    5. He quit the coalition with the Social Democrats ten years ago when they looked in trouble, and now he has left Chancellor Kohl in the lurch.
    6. 'They simply lurch from one catastrophe to the next, leaving chaos and dismay in their wake,' he told the Fire Brigades Union at Bridlington.
    7. He had told Mr Smith there was no way back, he could not leave VW in the lurch.
    8. While an election isn't likely for at least two years, the NDP's strong showing raises the specter of a lurch to the left in Canada's affairs and a deterioration in relations with the U.S., even threatening its security.
    9. But the Arab masses would be likely to lurch in an even more extremist direction.
    10. I was surprised when I got off the plane and saw that we didn't have a engine." "I felt a lurch and then a big bump," added Sandy Altner of Winnipeg, Canada. "It was almost like we ran into something in a car.
    11. People in the republic are uneasy when accused of leaving their northern cousins in the lurch.
    12. The losers conceded that the mood in the town, home to "gonzo" journalist Hunter S. Thompson and other eccentrics, had taken a lurch beyond the bourgeois.
    13. However, Charles Larkham, an equity analyst with the London investment firm James Capel and Co. Ltd., said: "We don't think it's the beginning of a major lurch lower" in stock prices.
    14. But a further downward lurch in BICC's European markets may make them all too real. Chasing yield may be the latest fashion.
    15. Even under the present rules of tort law, and their creative and excessive damage awards, such a reform should not drive bombmakers out of business, leaving Washington in the lurch.
    16. Two Irishmen, one drunk, lurch into this Post Office and ask for 'A Pound on demand' from their savings account.
    17. A future Democratic administration stands to lurch similarly between its different wings, and in all likelihood gravitate even further to the left than did Mr. Carter.
    18. After the CIA left them in the lurch, the Pathet Lao hunted them down.
    19. While the right-wing Liberal Front and Democratic Social Party also did well in a few towns, the strongest trend was the leftward lurch in the major centers of industrial and financial activity.
    20. In Britain and Australia, some weeds have developed the ability to metabolize most chemical poisons, leaving farmers in the lurch.
    21. We can't have any of your police state customs in London.' I stole off into the night but was later reprimanded by my friend for having left him in the lurch.
    22. There's just the regular traffic to worry about." Also left in the lurch by the change in plans was billionaire developer Donald Trump, whose invitation to have Gorbachev visit the opulent Trump Tower was rejected.
    23. "Everybody in the country wants to go to Las Vegas to see those signs, but who in the hell wants to go to Spring Hill?" Spring Hill resident Don Hickman, an engineer with South Central Bell, is one who views the slow lurch into the future gladly.
    24. It isn't the first time, however, that Mr. Trump has left stock speculators in the lurch.
    25. AS official German interest rates were reduced last week, the D-Mark yield curve took another lurch towards the sort of positive slope that the bond markets have been awaiting for some time.
    26. A damaging report could leave droves of employers in the lurch.
    27. Boats lurch against each other.
    28. But you know you get involved in other things and you just never get back to it." Westbrook's attorney, Charles Mathis of Milledgeville, said he had discussed the case with Briley. "I don't think I left him in the lurch," Mathis said recently.
    29. However with the volume of bad debts expected to jump from Pounds 1.2bn in 1991 to perhaps Pounds 2bn this year, and with the cushion of mortgage guarantee insurance virtually used up, societies are vulnerable to another downward lurch in house prices.
    30. Hutchison is waiting in the wings, and pricing could take another downward lurch next year.
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