barge• It was even better than going by barge.• A network of subsidizedcargobarges and water taxis would be introduced on the city's canals to compensate.• Each bargeweighs about 850 tons and carries about eleven hundred tons of steel.• The Columbia River was a trafficjam of barges carrying bauxite to the smelters in Longview, Washington.• There must be lots of bargeownerswantingsimilar gang-planks.• No one had seen them lift themselves from the barges or soarupward.• It seemed that he was not, after all, a true bargedweller.
1PUSHto move somewhere in a roughcareless way, often hitting against things 笨拙地走动;乱碰乱撞SYN push
She ran outside, barging past bushes and shrubs.
她跑了出去,磕磕绊绊经过一些灌木丛。
barge your way through/to etc something
She barged her way through the shopping crowds.
她横冲直撞地挤过购物的人群。
2barge in (also barge into something)phrasal verbphr vENTERto enter somewhere rudely, or to rudely interrupt someone 闯入;打扰
George barged into my office without knocking.
乔治门也不敲就冲进了我的办公室。
on
‘Sorry to barge in on your evening, ’ James said.
“不好意思,晚上还来打扰你们。”詹姆斯说道。
Examples from the Corpus
barge in• I was studying when Ben suddenly barged in.• Some of the strikers came barging into the meeting and demanded to speak with the directors.• It's impossible to concentrate when people keep barging in on you.
barge• The others are always barging about the kitchen and the living-room.• He took a glass of water till the Home Guardbarged in and waved a muckle pistol in his face.• He was lonely and broke and had already barged in for the loan of a cupful of Quakeroats.• What am I, crazy, barging in on strangers trying to have a peacefulmeal?• She just barged into me, without even apologizing.• Made his name barging into their clubs and smashing up their meeting halls.• A woman carrying a large basketbarged past me to the front of the line.• A couple of kidsbarged past the guards at the door.• They were wild like animals, free-falling 15 feet or barging through the monuments.