🔍 牛津詞典
🔍 朗文詞典 🎯
🔍 劍橋詞典
🔍 柯林斯詞典
🔍 麥美倫詞典
🔍 韋氏詞典

檢索以下詞典:
(Mr. Ng 不推薦使用 Google 翻譯!)
最近搜尋:
BNC: 424 COCA: 342

spend

Word family
spend1 /spend/ ●●● S1 W1 verb (past tensepst and past participlepp spent /spent/)  
1 money [intransitiveI, transitiveT]SPEND MONEY to use your money to pay for goods or services 用(钱),花费
 I can’t afford to spend any more money this week.
这星期我没有能力花更多的钱了。
spend £5/$10 etc
 I only want to spend about $20.
我只想花 20 美元左右的钱。
spend something on something
 More money should be spent on education.
在教育上应该投入更多的钱。
spend something on somebody
 Mum never spends any money on herself.
妈妈从来都不在自己身上花钱。
 The repairs cost a lot, but it’s money well spent (=a sensible way of spending money).
修理费很高,但这是该花的钱。
nGrammar
You spend money on something:
I don’t spend much on clothes.
Don’t say: I don’t spend much for clothes.
2 time 时间 [transitiveT]SPEND TIME to use time doing a particular thing or pass time in a particular place 度过,消磨,花〔时间〕
spend time etc with somebody
 I want to spend more time with my family.
我想花更多的时间和家人在一起。
spend time etc in/at something
 We’ll have to spend the night in a hotel.
我们将不得不在宾馆过夜。
 His childhood was spent in Brazil.
他的童年是在巴西度过的。
spend time etc doing something
 Stacey spends all her free time painting.
斯泰茜把所有的空余时间都用来绘画。
3
a) spend the night with somebodySEX/HAVE SEX WITH to stay for the night and have sex with someone 和某人过夜〔指发生性关系〕
b) spend the night (at something) if someone spends the night at someone’s house, they sleep at that person’s house for a night (在某处)过夜
 She spent the night at a friend’s house.
她在一位朋友家里过了一夜。
4 force/effort 力量/努力 [transitiveT] to use effort or energy to do something 花〔精力〕
 I love to cook, but I don’t feel like spending the energy every evening.
我喜欢烹饪,但不愿意每天晚上都花精力去做。
5. spend a penny British EnglishBrE spoken old-fashionedHBH to urinate – used when you want to avoid saying this directly 小便〔委婉说法〕
Examples from the Corpus
THESAURUS
spend to use money to buy things 用〔钱〕,花费
I bought two skirts and a T-shirt and I only spent $50.
我买了两条裙子,一件T恤衫,只花了50美元。
How much do you spend a week on food?
你一个星期购买食物花多少钱?
go through something (also get through something British EnglishBrE) to spend all of an amount of money over a period of time – used especially when saying that someone spends a lot of money 花光,用完〔尤指许多钱〕
I got through all my money in less than a month, and had to get my parents to send me more.
我不到一个月就花完了所有的钱,只得叫我父母再寄。
go to great expense to spend a lot of money in order to do something, because you think it is important or special 〔因为某事重要或特别而〕花大钱
The party was wonderful – they had obviously gone to great expense.
派对办得非常好——他们肯定花了不少钱。
There’s no need to go to great expense.
没有必要花大钱。
squander /ˈskwɒndə $ ˈskwɑːndər/ to waste money on unnecessary things, instead of saving it or using it carefully 浪费〔钱〕,挥霍
His son had squandered the family fortune on gambling and women.
他儿子赌博、玩女人,把家财挥霍殆尽。
splash out British EnglishBrE informal to spend a lot of money on something you really want or will enjoy 〔在非常想要或喜欢的东西上〕大手大脚地花钱
Let’s splash out on a bottle of champagne.
我们奢侈一回,来瓶香槟吧。
People often splash out for Christmas and then regret it later.
人们往往在圣诞节的时候不惜花费,事后又追悔莫及。
blow informal to spend a lot of money on something, especially on something that you do not really need 〔尤指在非必需的东西上〕乱花〔钱〕
Her husband blew all their savings on a new sports car.
她丈夫用他们的全部积蓄买了一辆新跑车。
neconomize to spend less money
We’re trying to economize by eating at home instead of going out for meals.
Examples from the Corpus
spend2n noun [uncountableU]  
nthe amount of money spent by a company, organization, or person on something – used especially in business
 I was just totting up our advertising spend in the last four or five weeks.
From Longman Business Dictionary
spendspend1 /spend/ verb (past tensepst and past participlepp spent /spent/) [intransitiveI, transitiveT]
1to use your money to buy or pay for things
How much do we have to spend?
It is worth spending money on advertising.
2to use or pass time
Effective managers spend time getting to know their workers.
I have spent the past seven years working in industry.
spendspend2 noun [uncountableU] British EnglishBrEACCOUNTING
the amount of money spent by a company on a particular activity in a particular period of time
They increased the marketing spend needed to launch the new brands.
Origin spend
(1100-1200) Partly from Latin expendere ( → EXPEND) and partly, later, from Old French despendre, from Latin dispendere to weigh out

👨🏻‍🏫 Mr. Ng 朗文詞典 📚 – longman.mister5️⃣.net
切換為繁體中文
Site Uptime