cleaver
英式音标:[ˈkli:və(r)] 美式音标:[ˈklivɚ]
cleaver基本解释 n. 切肉刀;[五金] 劈刀n. (Cleaver)人名;(英)克利弗 cleaver的意思释义 n.砍肉刀,剁肉刀;变形 复
cleaver怎么读
英式音标:[ˈkli:və(r)]
美式音标:[ˈklivɚ]
cleaver基本解释
n. 切肉刀;[五金] 劈刀
n. (Cleaver)人名;(英)克利弗
cleaver的意思释义
n.
砍肉刀,剁肉刀;
变形
复数:cleavers
英英释义
cleaver[ \'kli:və ]n.a butcher\'s knife having a large square blade
同义词:meat cleaverchopper
cleaver用法及例句
双语例句
用作名词(n.)
In fact, a cleaver is a class of ax.
实际上,切肉刀也是斧子的一种。
例句参考
Repair replication in Chinese hamster cells after damage from ultraviolet light.Defective repair replication of DNA in xeroderma pigmentosum. 1968.
Induction of Pancreatic Differentiation by Signals from Blood Vessels
Activation of a metabolic gene regulatory network downstream of mTOR complex 1
CELL SURVIVAL CHARACTERISTICS AND MOLECULAR RESPONSES OF ANTARCTIC PHYTOPLANKTON TO ULTRAVIOLET‐B RADIATION1
Endothelial signaling during development.
Paradoxes of participation: questioning participatory approaches to development
Banach Spaces of Analytic Functions
New GABAergic interneurons in the adult neocortex and striatum are generated from different precursors.
Cancer in xeroderma pigmentosum and related disorders of DNA repair
cleaver词源
cleaver (n.)
late 15c., \"one who splits,\" agent noun from cleave (v.1). Originally \"one who splits boards with a wedge instead of sawing;\" attested as part of a surname from mid-14c. Meaning \"butcher\'s chopper\" is from mid-15c.
This last [\"Marrowbones and Cleaver\"] is a sign in Fetter Lane, originating from a custom, now rapidly dying away, of the butcher boys serenading newly married couples with these professional instruments. Formerly, the band would consist of four cleavers, each of a different tone, or, if complete, of eight, and by beating their marrowbones skilfully against these, they obtained a sort of music somewhat after the fashion of indifferent bell-ringing. When well performed, however, and heard from a proper distance, it was not altogether unpleasant. ... The butchers of Clare market had the reputation of being the best performers. ... This music was once so common that Tom Killigrew called it the national instrument of England. [Larwood & Hotten, \"The History of Signboards from the Earliest Times to the Present Day,\" London, 1867]