Tambour

[tæm,buә]

解释:

(noun.) a drum.

(noun.) a frame made of two hoops; used for embroidering.

校对:马奇--From WordNet

解释:

(n.) A kind of small flat drum; a tambourine.

(n.) A small frame, commonly circular, and somewhat resembling a tambourine, used for stretching, and firmly holding, a portion of cloth that is to be embroidered; also, the embroidery done upon such a frame; -- called also, in the latter sense, tambour work.

(n.) Same as Drum, n., 2(d).

(n.) A work usually in the form of a redan, to inclose a space before a door or staircase, or at the gorge of a larger work. It is arranged like a stockade.

(n.) A shallow metallic cup or drum, with a thin elastic membrane supporting a writing lever. Two or more of these are connected by an India rubber tube, and used to transmit and register the movements of the pulse or of any pulsating artery.

(v. t.) To embroider on a tambour.

约瑟夫编辑

解释:

n. a small shallow drum: a frame on which muslin or other material is stretched for embroidering: a rich kind of gold and silver embroidery: silk or other stuff embroidered on a tambour: a cylindrical stone in the shaft of a column a drum: a vestibule of timber-work serving to break the draught in a church-porch &c.: a work formed of palisades defending a gate &c.—v.t. to embroider on a tambour.—v.i. to do tambour-work.

切丽录入

例句:

巴贝奇录入

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