词汇 | card |
释义 | card noun uk /kɑːd/ us /kɑːrd/ cardnoun (PERMISSION)B1[ C ] a small, rectangular piece of card or plastic, often with your signature, photograph, or other information proving who you are, that allows you to do something, such as make a payment, get money from a bank, or enter a particular place: (显示个人信息的)卡片;银行卡;通行证 put something on your/someone's card I don't have any cash - can I put this on (= pay using) my card? A lot of shops won't accept cheques unless you have a cheque card with you.许多商店不收支票,除非你带了支票保付卡。 The bank's closed now, but I can get some money out with my card. You usually have to show your (membership) card at the door.通常必须在门口出示你的(会员)卡。 See also phone card railcard scorecard This credit card allows you to withdraw up to £200 a day from cash dispensers. Unfortunately, I didn't have my credit card with me or I'd certainly have bought it. Put your plastic card in the slot, and the machine will read it and identify who you are.把你的信用卡插入槽内,机器就会读卡并辨认你的身份。 Entry to the club is only permitted on production of a membership card. The introduction of identity cards has been opposed by the campaign for civil liberties.身份证的实行遭到了公民自由运动的反对。 Payment methods anti-kickback ATM card automatic withdrawal bad cheque baksheesh bribe chip liquid meal ticket microtransaction monetization monetize money-back monometallic PFI ready money remittance rubber severance wave and pay cardnoun (GAME)A2[ C ](alsoplaying card) one of a set of 52 small rectangular pieces of stiff paper each with a number and one of four signs printed on it, used in games: 纸牌 card game Whist is my favourite card game.惠斯特牌是我最喜欢玩的纸牌游戏。 pack of cards mainly UKAfter dinner, Ted got out a pack of cards.晚饭后,特德拿出了一副纸牌。 deck of cards USAfter dinner, Ted got out a deck of cards. John shuffled (= mixed up) the cards before he dealt them (out) (= gave them to the players).约翰在发牌前先洗了牌。 a card table牌桌 Ian Dikhtiar/EyeEm/GettyImages cardsA2[ plural ] any of a range of games played with cards, such as poker, whist, and bridge: 纸牌游戏 I've never been much good at cards.我向来都不擅长玩纸牌游戏。 We played cards all evening. I bought a new pack of cards. I had really good cards in my hand. I dealt the cards to all the players. She laid all her cards face up on the table. Card games all in bidding blackjack bridge busted flush canasta card sharp deal deuce diamond pool queen re-raise rebid recut rookie card solitaire spade stick straight cardnoun (GREETINGS)A2[ C ] a rectangular piece of stiff paper, folded in half, with a picture on the front and often a message printed inside, sent on a special occasion: 贺卡 anniversary/get-well cards周年纪念/祝愿康复卡 It's Steve's birthday on Thursday - I must send him a card.周四是史蒂夫的生日——我得给他寄张卡。 Jamie Grill/GettyImages [ C ] a postcard明信片 I've circulated a good luck card for everyone to sign.我拿了一张好运卡传着让每个人都签名。 He's so cheap he didn't even buy me a card for my birthday.他真小气,居然连张生日卡都没给我买。 I wonder who this card is from.我不知道这个卡是谁寄来的。 Even if she didn't want to send a present, she could at least have sent a card.即使不想送礼物,她起码也应该寄一张贺卡。 I had posted the card two months previously.我两个月以前就把那张卡片寄了。 Letters, notes and cards aerogramme air letter billet-doux chain letter Christmas card correspondence get-well card greetings card handbill hate mail invitation junk mail place card poison-pen letter postcard PPS PS rejection round robin wire cardnoun (INFORMATION)B1[ C ](alsobusiness card) a small, rectangular piece of stiff paper with information printed on it, especially a person's job title, business address, and phone number: 名片 Here, let me give you my card. My phone number is here on my business card. Pisan Kumpree/iStock/Getty Images Plus/GettyImages [ C ](alsotrading card) a small, rectangular piece of stiff paper with a picture of someone or something, especially a sports player, and information about them, for people to collect and exchange with other people: I can't believe I'm playing against guys whose cards I collected as a kid. a football/baseball card luvemakphoto/iStock Editorial/Getty Images /GettyImages She handed me a business card with her name neatly embossed on it.她递给我一张名片,上面简洁地凸印着她的名字。 He has all his friends' names and addresses on a card index. Information and messages advance notice advance warning advertisement aide-mémoire ammunition credential flier gory guideline handout info PSA push notification radiogram readout sidelight subtlety telemetry the gory detailsidiom the real deal You can also find related words, phrases, and synonyms in the topics: Card games cardnoun (STIFF PAPER)[ C or U ] (a piece of) thick stiff paper(一张)厚纸片,卡纸 Publishing: paper & stationery A3 A5 acid-free assembler backspace ballpoint pen chalk fountain pen gift wrap grammage hanging chad head-up display notepad propelling pencil pulp quill quire qwerty ream vellum cardnoun (COMPUTER)B1[ C ] a thin plate inside a computer that contains very small electronic circuits and controls certain operations of the computer: (计算机的)卡,插件 a graphics/sound card显卡/声卡 Computer hardware 3-D printer active matrix alt- associative memory backlight Bluetooth chip console flat screen joypad microcomputer multi-client multitasker netbook non-mobile number pad terminal trackball underscore VDT cardnoun (PERSON)[ C ]old-fashionedinformal a funny or strange person: 活宝;怪人 You're such a card, Patrick!帕特里克,你可真是个活宝! Strange, suspicious and unnatural things and people alien anomaly anti-alien Bermuda Triangle corn circle flake grotesque kook kryptonite loiterer Martian perviness quirk screwball sicko sociopath sociopathic spaceman weirdo whack job Idiomsbe on the cards your best/strongest/trump card have a card up your sleeve keep/hold your cards close to your chest put/lay your cards on the table the race, gender, etc. card card verb[ T ] USuk /kɑːd/ us /kɑːrd/ to ask someone to show you a document, especially an identity card, in order to prove how old they are要求出示身份证件(以确认年龄) Questioning people & asking questions in general ask after someone ask questions of someone/somethingidiom be someone's for the askingidiom beat something out of someone bombard consultative Gallup poll inquisition inquisitor outpoll pin someone down ply someone with something poll pry put someone through the millidiom put someone through the wringeridiom quiz shoot survey trick question card | American Dictionarycard noun[ C ] us/kɑrd/ cardnoun[C] (INFORMATION)a small, rectangular piece of stiff paper or plastic with information on it that shows who you are or allows you to do something: a library/membership/business card I used my credit/debit/charge card to pay for the groceries. cardnoun[C] (GAME)(alsoplaying card) one of a set of 52 small, rectangular pieces of stiff paper, each with a number or letter and one of four symbols printed on it, used in games: a deck of cards cardnoun[C] (GREETING)a rectangular piece of stiff paper, folded in half, usually with a picture on the front and often a message printed inside, sent on a special occasion: a birthday/anniversary/get-well card A card is also a postcard. Idiomsin the cards lay your cards on the table the cards are stacked against someone card verb[ T ] infmlus/kɑrd/ cardverb[T] (GET INFORMATION)to ask someone to show you a document that shows how old the person is card | Business Englishcard noun[ C ] uk /kɑːd/us COMMERCE, BANKING a small rectangular piece of plastic given to a customer by a bank or store that allows them to make payments, take money from their account, etc.: pay with a/use a/pay by cardYou can pay by credit or debit card. Most businesses won't accept cheques without a card. He lost his wallet and had to cancel all his cards. Would you rather pay cash or put it on your card? When she tried to get money from the machine, her card was refused. WORKPLACE a small piece of plastic or stiff paper with your signature, photograph, and often other electronic information on it that proves who you are, allows you to enter a particular place, etc.: You have to swipe your card to get into the building. The new style of driver's licence comes with a photo ID card. WORKPLACE, MEETINGS (alsobusiness card) a small card that has your name, company name, and the job you do printed on it: He shook my hand politely and gave me his card. IT a small electronic object that is part of a computer or can be connected to it, making it able to do a particular thing: If you have your own computer, you can hire ethernet cards from the college to connect to the network. An audio interface can be a simple card that plugs into your computer to allow you to route the sound out to your speakers. See alsoaffinity card bank card cash card charge card cheque card credit card debit card expansion card gold card graphics card green card greetings card ID card identity card index card loyalty card membership card memory card network card payment card railcard SIMM smart card sound card store card stored value card swipe card time card top-up card Examples of cardcard Fortunately, rice scientists do have some cards up their sleeves. Data were systematically taken from the clinic notes, coded and transferred to punched cards for analysis. The data were coded to 80-column punch card format and transferred to magnetic tape. For the rotation plots, sets of cards for all four insecticides used in the rotation schedule were prepared each week for the bioassays. In a series of transactions that may have taken a matter of mere days, the price per card had climbed by 400 per cent. On the other, it adds to the reader's convenience in accessing the card catalogue to the book stack. In our study, each grower was given a set of cards, each printed with a goal or value statement relating to farm management. Semi-structured and reliable methods of assessing insight counteract this problem to some extent, as does the use of relatively language-free tests such as card sorting. Well-packaged ones can create a favourable impression, as an elegant business card does. That is the way minds go on with respect to arranging cards and similar objects to which conventional ordering practices apply. Pictures were displayed on index cards and came from drawings or photographs matching as many word list items as possible. The experimenter told the caregiver that she or he was going to see pairs of cards with object drawings and unfamiliar words on them. On each of four trials, caregivers had to select one of two cards, both of which showed a familiar object bearing an unfamiliar property. Vigilance in protecting it is no longer a communal calling card. Overall, vaccination cards were produced by 96 % of children (98 % in rural and 94.3 % in urban settings). See all examples of card These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors. Collocations withcardcardThese are words often used in combination with card. Click on a collocation to see more examples of it. bingo card It is easy to get a building licence for a bingo card factory, but difficult to get one to build a hotel. From the Hansard archive Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0 card counting I was fascinated by the mathematics of card counting and of course the lure of big money and the high roller lifestyle. From Wikipedia This example is from Wikipedia and may be reused under a CC BY-SA license. card issuer It was the world's largest independent credit cardissuer, specializing in affinity cards. From Wikipedia This example is from Wikipedia and may be reused under a CC BY-SA license. These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors. See all collocations with card |
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