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 winning ['winiŋ]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 胜利, 获得, 成功, 赢得物

a. 得胜的, 胜利的




    winning
    [ noun ]
    1. succeeding with great difficulty

    2. <noun.act>
      winning is not everything
    [ adj ]
    1. having won

    2. <adj.all>
      the victorious entry
      the winning team
    3. very attractive; capturing interest

    4. <adj.all>
      a fetching new hairstyle
      something inexpressibly taking in his manner
      a winning personality


    Win \Win\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Won}, Obs. {Wan}; p. pr. & vb.
    n. {Winning}.] [OE. winnen, AS. winnan to strive, labor,
    fight, endure; akin to OFries. winna, OS. winnan, D. winnen
    to win, gain, G. gewinnen, OHG. winnan to strive, struggle,
    Icel. vinna to labor, suffer, win, Dan. vinde to win, Sw.
    vinna, Goth. winnan to suffer, Skr. van to wish, get, gain,
    conquer. [root]138. Cf. {Venerate}, {Winsome}, {Wish},
    {Wont}, a.]
    1. To gain by superiority in competition or contest; to
    obtain by victory over competitors or rivals; as, to win
    the prize in a gate; to win money; to win a battle, or to
    win a country. ``This city for to win.'' --Chaucer. ``Who
    thus shall Canaan win.'' --Milton.

    Thy well-breathed horse
    Impels the flying car, and wins the course.
    --Dryden.

    2. To allure to kindness; to bring to compliance; to gain or
    obtain, as by solicitation or courtship.

    Thy virtue wan me; with virtue preserve me. --Sir P.
    Sidney.

    She is a woman; therefore to be won. --Shak.

    3. To gain over to one's side or party; to obtain the favor,
    friendship, or support of; to render friendly or
    approving; as, to win an enemy; to win a jury.

    4. To come to by toil or effort; to reach; to overtake.
    [Archaic]

    Even in the porch he him did win. --Spenser.

    And when the stony path began,
    By which the naked peak they wan,
    Up flew the snowy ptarmigan. --Sir W.
    Scott.

    5. (Mining) To extract, as ore or coal. --Raymond.

    Syn: To gain; get; procure; earn. See {Gain}.


    Winning \Win"ning\, a.
    Attracting; adapted to gain favor; charming; as, a winning
    address. ``Each mild and winning note.'' --Keble.


    Winning \Win"ning\, n.
    1. The act of obtaining something, as in a contest or by
    competition.

    2. The money, etc., gained by success in competition or
    contest, esp, in gambling; -- usually in the plural.

    Ye seek land and sea for your winnings. --Chaucer.

    3. (Mining)
    (a) A new opening.
    (b) The portion of a coal field out for working.

    {Winning headway} (Mining), an excavation for exploration, in
    post-and-stall working.

    {Winning post}, the post, or goal, at the end of a race.

    1. Coniston, which owns nearly 6 percent of Gillette stock, forced the proxy vote earlier this year in hopes of winning four directors' seats to pressure the 12-member Gillette board to sell the company.
    2. A student, David B. Clark, in the University of Minnesota's Tax Law Clinic argued the winning appeal.
    3. In 1955, British Coal's staff totalled over 700,000. It is now 44,000. In other words, over the long haul the economic logic is winning.
    4. Life's great." Here are the winning weekly state lottery numbers picked Wednesday: Wednesday Megabucks: 06; 14; 19; 26; 33; 34.
    5. Ana Quirot has had the misfortune to be Cuban in a decade when politics have been as big a factor at the Olympics as the stopwatch. Since the early 1980s she has been winning World Cups and Pan-American titles.
    6. The legislation is given good prospects for winning House approval, but it faces tough going in the Senate.
    7. In addition to the cash bid, the winning consortium has to pay 2 per cent of qualifying revenue for the first three years and 8 per cent for the remaining seven years. Oracle Teletext came second with a bid of Pounds 6.676m.
    8. The breach-of-contract theory was being used by plaintiffs elsewhere to avoid the constitutional obstacles that stand in the way of winning privacy and libel suits, said Dick Winfield, an attorney for the AP.
    9. That's a long winning streak by any standard.
    10. Democrats, who have never won the White House without winning Texas, cling to the lowest number.
    11. The steady improvement of the balance sheet since the buy-out has allowed RJR Nabisco to shed its 'highly leveraged transaction' status, winning access to cheaper bank finance.
    12. A 63-year-old real estate agent who "always needs money" randomly picked numbers from the front page of a newspaper to beat the 14 million-to-1 odds for Florida's Lotto, winning a U.S. record $55 million.
    13. More than 1,000 angry Cypriot soccer fans besieged the winning Scottish team after a World Cup qualifying match, stoning the Scots' locker room and injuring nine people, police said.
    14. The most prestigious gold medal, in the overall category, went to Switzerland, with West Germany winning the silver and the U.S. team the bronze.
    15. After three years of increasing chaos and decreasing profits, Pillsbury has little time to find a winning recipe.
    16. At this hastily called summit Mr. Reagan came within a hairbreadth of winning agreement to a long-held dream of eliminating all nuclear weapons.
    17. In winning the account, TBWA bested Chiat/Day/Mojo; Saatchi & Saatchi Advertising; and Messner Vetere Berger Carey Schmetterer.
    18. The Greek Olympic Committee said its decision is "the minimum expression of disapproval" of Atlanta's winning the bidding to host the 1996 Games, denounced by the Greek press as greed, money and commercialism defeating Olympic ideals.
    19. There is little sentiment in Congress for rearming the anti-government guerillas, and winning the congressional committee approval needed to continue non-lethal aid through February will be difficult enough, another official said.
    20. Mr. Sullivan said that Mr. McWhorter's departure shows "the technoids are winning," at Wang.
    21. "I think I'm winning," Collins said after the session, "but the point is I can't just win.
    22. Since winning election last year, Duke says he has moderated his stand.
    23. Oliveira says, "We are winning the war.
    24. KWO is an integrated structure, each department depending on each other for success and winning customers.
    25. The winners beat odds of 12.9 million to 1 to pick the six winning numbers from 1 to 54: 3, 14, 32, 40, 46 and 54.
    26. The collapse of the independent ticket, therefore, was seen as a fillip to President Bush's chances of winning re-election on November 3. Thursday's advance in stock prices would have been bigger had it not been for the rise in German interest rates.
    27. The Liberal party was swept into power, winning 19 seats in Tasmania's 35-seat House of Assembly.
    28. Unlike Janacek, who is steadily winning acceptance as a repertory composer, Martinu had no Max Brod to translate and promote his stage works.
    29. Said Coach K: "We'd been here before and lost, and while I don't think I got hung up on that, winning is better.
    30. The earnings report was released a day after the paperworkers union called off a 16-month-old strike at International Paper mills in three states without winning an agreement from the company.
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