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 maneuver [mә'nu:vә]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 演习, 调遣, 策略

vt. 调遣, 演习, 用计

vi. 调遣, 演习, 用计

[医] 手法, 手技, 操作法




    maneuver
    [ noun ]
    1. a military training exercise

    2. <noun.act>
    3. a plan for attaining a particular goal

    4. <noun.cognition>
    5. a deliberate coordinated movement requiring dexterity and skill

    6. <noun.act>
      he made a great maneuver
      the runner was out on a play by the shortstop
    7. a move made to gain a tactical end

    8. <noun.act>
    9. an action aimed at evading an opponent

    10. <noun.act>
    [ verb ]
    1. direct the course; determine the direction of travelling

    2. <verb.motion> channelise channelize direct guide head manoeuver manoeuvre point steer
    3. act in order to achieve a certain goal

    4. <verb.social>
      manoeuver manoeuvre
      He maneuvered to get the chairmanship
      She maneuvered herself into the directorship
    5. perform a movement in military or naval tactics in order to secure an advantage in attack or defense

    6. <verb.competition>
      manoeuver manoeuvre operate


    Maneuver \Ma*neu"ver\, Manoeuvre \Ma*n[oe]u"vre\, v. i. [imp. &
    p. p. {Maneuvered}or {Man[oe]uvred}; p. pr. & vb. n.
    {Maneuvering}, or {Man[oe]uvring}.] [Cf. F. man[oe]uvrer. See
    {Maneuver}, n.]
    1. To perform a movement or movements in military or naval
    tactics; to make changes in position with the intention of
    getting an advantage in attack or defense.

    2. Hence: To make changes in one's approach to solving a
    problem, so as to achieve maximum advantage in a changing
    situation; -- used especially in competitive situations,
    as in politics, diplomacy, or sports.
    [PJC]

    3. To manage with address or art; to scheme.


    Maneuver \Ma*neu"ver\, Manoeuvre \Ma*n[oe]u"vre\, n. [F.
    man[oe]uvre, OF. manuevre, LL. manopera, lit., hand work,
    manual labor; L. manus hand + opera, fr. opus work. See
    {Manual}, {Operate}, and cf. {Mainor}, {Manure}.]
    1. Management; dexterous movement; specif., a military or
    naval evolution, movement, or change of position.

    2. Management with address or artful design; adroit
    proceeding; stratagem.


    Maneuver \Ma*neu"ver\, Manoeuvre \Ma*n[oe]u"vre\, v. t.
    1. To change the positions of, as of troops of ships.

    1. Pilots managed to maneuver the plane down into the Sioux City airport by using thrust from the two remaining engines.
    2. Salomon executives continued to maneuver over the changes yesterday.
    3. This means that the orbiter had dropped into a lower orbit." Such a maneuver would put distance between the two craft since a lower object orbits faster.
    4. The urban operation is part of a national military maneuver which now includes actions in 9 of the 14 provinces of the country.
    5. "We can help with professional advice, and they help with media planning and buying." The maneuver doesn't involve any exchange of equity or cash and is a more cautious version of the health-care acquisitions by McCann's big competition.
    6. Congressional sources confirm speculation by practitioners that the Campeau maneuver prompted the legislation.
    7. Fed statistics indicated that the central bank bought more than $4 billion in a maneuver known as a "coupon pass."
    8. Andres learned to drive when he was 6, when his father plopped the boy on his lap and showed him how to maneuver.
    9. "There's no risk I perceive in this at all," he said, noting that the Blue Angels have "clear air space for every maneuver," allowing pilots room to operate if one of their FA-18 Hornets or a pilot has a problem.
    10. With a foothold on the high ground, room to maneuver, and remote sensing, Israel could ensure that the first tank to cross the Jordan would also be the last.
    11. He also seems graver, which is understandable considering the uphill task he has undertaken to reconstruct the Soviet economy and to maneuver around the dazzling changes that are sweeping Eastern Europe.
    12. "But he seems to have so little room for maneuver, a lot of people are saying he will fall."
    13. Such tactics intended to make a maneuver look risky without taking a major risk are called "cheats" among the unit's 16 officers and 95 enlisted personnel, who are based at Pensacola, Fla.
    14. No one considered trying to overturn it by amendment, however, for the southern states had enough votes to block such a maneuver.
    15. A fighter jet crashed and exploded in a giant fireball at ceremonies honoring the Indian air force Sunday after the pilot apparently misjudged the plane's altitude and tried an extra acrobatic maneuver, officials said.
    16. Out of this have come their untested but not-to-be-dismissed operational maneuver groups and formal revisions of doctrine.
    17. The rope became tangled around the landing gear and Coatsworth had to maneuver the craft through a clearing in some trees to land.
    18. Expert riggers who performed the tricky maneuver kept their hands off, fearing sweat or body oils would harm the ancient wood.
    19. Concedes an international monetary official: "The Germans don't have much room for maneuver."
    20. When you get a lady of 110 pounds trying to maneuver a double-hose system, it's obviously a problem," Boswell said.
    21. The maneuver delays the train for hours.
    22. But now, as pressure rises on Germany to raise its rates again, France has less margin of maneuver.
    23. That battle raged just inside Iraq to the north of Kuwait, where a broad sweeping maneuver by U.S., French and British forces trapped the premier Iraqi force.
    24. Rep. Charles E. Bennett, D-Fla., subcommittee chairman and architect of the funding maneuver, is wary of an administration plan to sell sophisticated Aegis radar systems to Japan for new Japanese destroyers.
    25. But if this is nothing but a maneuver and he will return to what he has been doing in recent years, not only critical terms _ Americans believe this is to be constructive _ but also in destructive activities, destructive efforts.
    26. All three would be in positions to make and influence policy. While Congress defines the broad outlines, its dictates on complex health issues usually leave the department with ample room to maneuver in enforcing the law and making rules and regulations.
    27. But that would require a change of the party's charter to permit a part-time chairman, a difficult maneuver needing a two-thirds vote of the committee.
    28. However, Marcio Thomaz Bastos, chief lawyer for the prosecution, said the confession was a planned maneuver to spare his father.
    29. In a clever political maneuver, the president recently appointed a moderate leader of the Peronist General Confederation of Labor (CGT), Carlos Alderete, as his new secretary of labor.
    30. One maneuver every two years would be allowed to exceed those limits.
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