marker

名词 n. 动词 v.

英文释义

名词 n.
  1. Someone or something that creates marks, particularly; A felt-tipped pen, a marker pen. countable,uncountable
    — Don't use the permanent marker on the whiteboard.
  2. Someone or something that creates marks, particularly; A scorekeeper, especially one who tallies billiard scores. countable,uncountable
  3. Someone or something that creates marks, particularly; A device that fires a paintball. countable,uncountable
  4. Someone or something used to mark a position or amount, particularly countable,uncountable
    — Board member Phillip Carlson […] said he considers [the election of] Brading to be a marker for the distance the gay and lesbian community has come.
  5. Someone or something used to mark a position or amount, particularly; A real or virtual objective, something to be aimed for. countable,uncountable
    — Pellegrini insisted this was a game City had to win - this they did and with the sort of performance that put down a marker for how the Chilean wants his team to play.
  6. Someone or something used to mark a position or amount, particularly; A location on a stage or set where an actor is to stand or move to during a scene, usually indicated by a small X design placed on the floor. countable,uncountable
  7. Someone or something used to mark a position or amount, particularly; A location on a stage or set where an actor is to stand or move to during a scene, usually indicated by a small X design placed on the floor.; A direction issued by a camera operator for actors to be on their locations in readiness for a take. countable,uncountable
  8. Someone or something used to mark a position or amount, particularly; Synonym of IOU, an informal record of a debt. US,countable,slang,uncountable
  9. Someone or something used to mark a position or amount, particularly; A free or bound morpheme indicating a grammatical function. countable,uncountable
  10. Someone or something used to mark a position or amount, particularly; Ellipsis of discourse marker. abbreviation,alt-of,countable,ellipsis,uncountable
  11. Someone or something used to mark a position or amount, particularly; A gene or DNA sequence with a known location on a chromosome that can be used to identify individuals or species. countable,uncountable
    — Markers are mapped relative to one another on chromosomes and used as signposts against which to map genes of interest that are linked with marker. This process of finding the linked markers/genes is referred to as grouping.
  12. Someone or something used to mark a position or amount, particularly; A substance used as an indicator for diagnosis or other analysis, a biomarker. countable,uncountable
    — Nurse Hall: Is there any reason we shouldn't do a full workup? / Steve Denube: Ignorance is bliss; that's about it. Hangover's worse than usual but that's probably from the drinking and recreational drug use. / Nurse Hall: We'll ignore the ganja and booger sugar markers.
  13. Someone or something used to mark a position or amount, particularly; The soldier who forms the pilot of a wheeling column or marks the direction of an alignment. countable,uncountable
  14. Someone or something used to mark a position or amount, particularly; A sewing machine attachment that creases the fabric to mark a line countable,uncountable
  15. Someone or something used to mark a position or amount, particularly; A counter, especially one used in card games or backgammon. countable,uncountable
  16. Someone or something used to mark a position or amount, particularly; Any of various objects that mark a place on the landscape, such as a milepost, blaze, or surveyor's cairn. countable,uncountable
  17. Someone who assigns marks on tests, examinations, etc.; a grader. UK,countable,uncountable
    — So, in his end of term report, what marks would Brown award himself for his time at TfL? "8½," he replies. Why? "I'm a hard marker! […]
  18. The ink marks or residue of a felt-tipped pen. colloquial,uncountable
    — Susie got marker all over the walls.
  19. A personal favor owed to someone, whether written or not. countable,figuratively,uncountable
    — We may not be able to do this alone. Maybe it’s time to call in some of our markers.
  20. A formal certification that a company was the first to approach a competition authority to reveal the existence of a cartel, generally entitling it to greater leniency during the cartel's dissolution and punishment. countable,uncountable
  21. A player on defense used to mark one or more offensive players. countable,uncountable
    — He skipped past Marc Wilson before clipping a delicious cross into the Stoke danger zone, where Cisse's sharp movement allowed him to escape marker Robert Huth and send a far-post header crashing against the crossbar. And Cabaye was waiting to pounce on the rebound with a close range header.
  22. A player employed by a private club to compete against members. countable,dated,uncountable
    — The Court itself, with its rent, the wages of the Marker and the tips to the Marker, the rackets and the balls, the baths and the flannels and the washing of the flannels, do much to account for the costliness of play.
  23. A point, unit of scoring in a game or competition. Philippines,countable,informal,uncountable
动词 v.
  1. To mark or write on (something) using a marker
    — On one page someone has markered: "Remember, you are your own best thing."

词形变化

markers plural markers present,singular,third-person markering participle,present markered participle,past markered past

词源

词源 1
Etymology tree
English mark
Proto-Indo-European *-yósder.
Proto-Italic *-āzijos
Latin -āriusnom.
Latin -āriusbor.
Proto-Germanic *-ārijaz
Proto-West Germanic *-ārī
Old English -ere
Middle English -ere
English -er
English marker
From mark + -er.
词源 2
Etymology tree
English mark
Proto-Indo-European *-yósder.
Proto-Italic *-āzijos
Latin -āriusnom.
Latin -āriusbor.
Proto-Germanic *-ārijaz
Proto-West Germanic *-ārī
Old English -ere
Middle English -ere
English -er
English marker
From mark + -er.
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