中英文地名和人名建议选择专门化的地名译典或人名译典;有些缩写词在缩写词典中更容易查到;

    heights查询结果如下:

    音标:[haɪt]
    名词复数:heights 词频:高频常用词
    易混词:hight
    基本释义/说明:查询词heightsheight的名词复数或第三人称单数形式
    详解 词库 双语句典 英文释义 韦氏词典 英文百科 wiki词典 英文句库
    n.
    高度;高处
    He has achieved heights that I can never hope to attain to.
    他已经达到了我不敢企及的高度
    This map gives no indication of the heights of the hills.
    这张地图没有标出这些山的高度
    And then, becoming aware of the heights of exquisite sensibility he attained, he decided that this was love and that love was the greatest thing in the world
    这时他意识到了自己精微的感受力所到达的高度,便认定这就是爱情,爱情是世间最美妙的东西。
    When the liquid heights change, an “error” signal is produced and amplified to drive a servomotor
    当液柱高度变化时,产生一个“误差”信号,经放大后驱动伺服马达。
    -扩展释义
    【公共词典】
    高地
    -同义词和反义词
    -heights的不同词性形态

    形容词 变体/同根词

    Having a high arch.
    “There was an innate refinement, a languid queenly hauteur about Gerty which was unmistakably evidenced in her delicate hands and higharched instep.”
    Very elevated; extending or being far above a base; tall; lofty. || Pertaining to (or, especially of a language: spoken in) in an area which is at a greater elevation, for example more mountainous, than other regions. || (baseball, of a ball) Above the batter’s shoulders. || Relatively elevated; rising or raised above the average or normal level from which elevation is measured. || Having a specified elevation or height; tall. || Elevated in status, esteem, prestige; exalted in rank, station, or character. || Most exalted; foremost. || Of great importance and consequence: grave (if negative) or solemn (if positive). || Consummate; advanced (e.g. in development) to the utmost extent or culmination, or possessing a quality in its supreme degree, at its zenith. || Advanced in complexity (and hence potentially abstract and/or difficult to comprehend). || (in several set phrases) Remote in distance or time. || (in several set phrases) Very traditionalist and conservative, especially in favoring older ways of doing things; see e.g. high church, High Tory. || Elevated in mood; marked by great merriment, excitement, etc. || (of a lifestyle) Luxurious; rich. || Lofty, often to the point of arrogant, haugty, boastful, proud. || (with “on” or “about”) Keen, enthused. || (of a body of water) With tall waves. || Large, great (in amount or quantity, value, force, energy, etc). || Having a large or comparatively larger concentration of (a substance, which is often but not always linked by “in” when predicative). || (acoustics) Acute or shrill in pitch, due to being of greater frequency, i.e. produced by more rapid vibrations (wave oscillations). || (phonetics) Made with some part of the tongue positioned high in the mouth, relatively close to the palate. || (card game) Greater in value than other cards, denominations, suits, etc. || (poker) Having the highest rank in a straight, flush or straight flush. || (of a card or hand) Winning; able to take a trick, win a round, etc. || (of meat, especially venison) Strong-scented; slightly tainted/spoiled; beginning to decompose. || (slang) Intoxicated; under the influence of a mood-altering drug, formerly (until the early 20th century) usually alcohol, but now (by the mid 20th century) usually not alcohol but rather marijuana, cocaine, heroin, etc. || (nautical, of a sailing ship) Near, in its direction of travel, to the (direction of the) wind.
    “The view from the summit of the high mountain was spectacular.”
    “Catching the high ball is a very useful skill for the full back and wings in the game of rugby.”
    “He was promoted to a high position in government and set about pushing for the policies he advocated to be enacted.”
    Somewhat high.
    Having a high back.
    Rising higher; ascending.

    名词 变体/同根词

    height的异体字形式(obsolete outside US dialects, now proscribed)
    “Why, Mas’r Davy, you was but the heighth of the littlest of these, when I first see you!”
    “The plaine of the base and heighth is the solidity of a right prisma.”
    “A prisma is the triple of a pyramis of equall base and heighth.”
    The state of being high.
    “Her wide dark brown eyes and her thick coarse hair that she keeps styled in a professional bob accent the highness of her cheekbones.”
    “When his highness finally graced me with his presence I was forced to listen to the usual lecture about respect.”
    “Thirty gowns each, your highness, ten capes and five habits for both Princess Gayle and the viscountess as well.”
    That which heightens.
    “This was mitigated, to some extent, by the seat heightener on the driver’s seat.”
    An area of high land.
    “It gives incomers to the highlands and islands a link to their adoptive country that’s very much more real than blood or poetry.”
    “Watoga, West Virginia’s largest state park, in the Allegheny highlands, attracts wetland birds such as woodcocks, wood ducks, and waterthrushes.”
    “The highlands of Cape Breton, Coady’s homeland, are peopled with a mixture of Acadians, of French background, and Scots.”
    (online gaming) A high-level character in an MMORPG.
    “A lowbie always has access to highbie stuff simply by leveling up, but highbies are purposely restricted from this content.”

    动词 变体/同根词

    (transitive, dialectal) To make high; heighten.
    To make high; to raise higher; to elevate. || To advance, increase, augment, make larger, more intense, stronger etc.
    “As such, the facial features of almost all of the actors are that much more defined, which only serves to heighten and intensify the performances.”
    “The stage will be extended, heightening the grid by 3.4 metres.”
    “He fired randomly and without aiming, trying to simply heighten the confusion within the camp.”
    简典