pencil• Anyone got a pencil and paper?• Friedman argued that no single person, even a Nobel laureate, could make a pencil.• As the children arrive, give them a pencil and paper and ask them to join one of three or four groups.• Another picture, a pen and pencil drawing, is a more devastatingexposure still.• The teacher's coolpencilchartsnormal against the brown of the girl's cheek.• There were several colors of pencils, even a sliderule, at which she was frowning.• a redpencil• Let the students see that the student is able to cover both sides without lifting the pencil.
in pencil• Do the math problems in pencil , not pen.
1WRITEto write something or make a mark with a pencil 用铅笔写[标记]
a name pencilled on the envelope
用铅笔写在信封上的名字
2pencil somebody/something ↔ inphrasal verbphr vARRANGE A MEETING, EVENT ETCto make an arrangement for a meeting or other event, knowing that it might have to be changed later 暂定;暂时安排〔会面等〕
Pickford has been pencilled in as Robson’s replacement.
皮克福德被暂定为罗布森的接替者。
Examples from the Corpus
pencil in• Does he have to work hard to control the pencil?• There were boxes of colouredcrayons and wax, lead pencils and paints in colours he never knew existed.• Use coloredpencils to fill in each section.• The pencils are sold inhardware and building supplystores.• Tweed was watching him closely, pencil gripped in his hand but motionless.• Until he was 70 he drew in pencil and inpen and wash with great neatness.• Place five in the pencil pot in the kitchen.• Why on the sturdystem of farmers and merchants should one girlblossom into a story-teller in pencil and in words?
Examples from the Corpus
pencil• With clearsigns of a recovery, analysts are pencilling in a modestprofit for the full year.• A hearing has been pencilled in for September 17.• Hoare said last night it now expected to be trimming its full year forecast back from the £30mpencilled in so far.• We may pencil in the forest and the ponds.• She can pencil in the weight she hopes to be at the end of each month.• I found her name penciledinside the back cover of the book.• We wander through it like Casaubon, clutchinglists we've pencilled on the backs of envelopes.
Originpencil1
(1300-1400)Old Frenchpincel“paintbrush”, from Latinpenicillus“little tail”, from penis; → PENIS