雅虎香港 搜尋

搜尋結果

  1. tr.v. caused, caus·ing, caus·es. 1. To be the cause of or reason for; result in. 2. To bring about or compel by authority or force: The moderator invoked a rule causing the debate to be ended. [Middle English, from Old French, from Latin causa, reason, cause, grounds for a lawsuit, lawsuit, of unknown origin.]

  2. always If something always happens, it happens at all times. If it has always happened, or will always happen, it has happened forever or will happen forever.When always has one of these meanings, it is used with a simple form of a verb.If there is no auxiliary verb, always goes in front of the verb, unless the verb is be.

  3. through. (θru) prep. 1. in at one end, side, or surface and out at the other: to pass through a tunnel. 2. past; beyond: went through a red light. 3. from one to the other of: swinging through the trees. 4. across the extent of: traveled through several countries.

  4. throughout: (All over), adverb all over , every bit , from beginning to end , from first to last , from the ground up , from the word go , inside and out , over all , to the end throughout (During), adverb for the duration , for the period of , in the course of , until the conclusion of See also: ad interim , wholly

  5. often. ( ˈɒfən; ˈɒftən) adv. 1. frequently or repeatedly; much of the time. Also (archaic or US): oftentimes (archaic): ofttimes. 2. as often as not quite frequently. 3. every so often at intervals. 4. more often than not in more than half the instances. adj.

  6. 2. by any chance; in any case: how did you ever find out?. 3. at all times; always: ever busy. 4. in any possible way or manner: come as fast as ever you can. 5. informal chiefly Brit (intensifier, in the phrases ever so, ever such, and ever such a ): ever so good; ever such bad luck; ever such a waste.

  7. a. the whole quantity or amount of; totality of; every one of a class: all the rice; all men are mortal. b. ( as pronoun; functioning as sing or plural ): all of it is nice; all are welcome. c. ( in combination with a noun used as a modifier ): an all-ticket match; an all-amateur tournament; an all-night sitting.