face-off
英 ['feisɔ:f]
美
- n. 对峙;开球;面对面地会议
英英释义
- 1. a hostile disagreement face-to-face
- 2. (ice hockey) the method of starting play; a referee drops the puck between two opposing players
实用场景例句
- a face-off between the presidential candidates
- 总统候选人之间的辩论
牛津词典
- The Seattle Supersonics face off against Phoenix Suns and the Houston Rockets visit the Portland Trailblazers.
- 西雅图超音速队迎战凤凰城太阳队,休斯顿火箭队客场对波特兰开拓者队.
期刊摘选
- He and the manager have a face off, but nothing come of it.
- 他和经理对抗, 但是没什麽结果.
期刊摘选
- Tear her face off, strip her to the bones.
- 把她的脸咬下来, 啃她的骨头.
英汉文学
- On Sunday, winless Germany and the Dominican Republic face off in the soccer match.
- 周日, 无胜绩的德国和多米尼加队将进行一场球赛.
期刊摘选
- The Blackhawks and Flyers face off in Game 3 at the Wachovia Center June 2.
- 面对黑鹰和传单的第三场比赛时,在瓦乔维亚中心6月2日.
期刊摘选
- The teams were ready to face off.
- 球队准备开球.
期刊摘选
- All three games will face off at 8 pm German time.
- 这三场比赛都会在德国时间晚上八点开始.
期刊摘选
- The two teams are in position, ready to face off.
- 两个队都已各就各位, 准备开始比赛.
辞典例句
- They face off again, and Carlos Queiroz insisted that familiarity was not always a good thing.
- 这两队将再次对抗, 而奎罗斯坚持熟悉感并不会是一件好事.
期刊摘选
- Today, in the final group match, America will face off against Spain.
- 在今天的小组决赛中, 美国队将与西班牙队对阵.
期刊摘选
- Even if you succeeded in making it let go, it'll peel his face off with it.
- 即使成功地使它让的你去, 它将走开以它削他的脸皮.
期刊摘选
- The job candidates will face off in a group interview this afternoon.
- 求职者今天下午将会在一场集体面试中竞争角逐.
期刊摘选
- You must face off the casting.
- 你必须把铸件的表面弄光滑.
期刊摘选
双语例句
- 1. They have maintained their optimism in the face of desolating subjugation.
- 面对遭征服的悲惨命运,他们保持了乐观的态度。
来自柯林斯例句
- 2. The cold, misty air felt wonderful on his face.
- 雾蒙蒙,寒冷的空气使他脸上感觉很舒爽。
来自柯林斯例句
- 3. He will now face a disciplinary hearing for having an affair.
- 他因有外遇而要面临纪律听证会的裁决。
来自柯林斯例句
- 4. A young man plunged from a sheer rock face to his death.
- 一名男青年从陡峭的岩壁上坠崖身亡。
来自柯林斯例句
- 5. The government wilted in the face of such powerful pressure.
- 政府面对如此大的压力,失去了信心。
来自柯林斯例句
英文词源
- face-off (n.)
- also faceoff, 1893 in sports (hockey, lacrosse, etc.), from verbal phrase in a sports sense, attested from 1867 (see face (v.) + off (adv.)).