inching的意思和读音

inchinginch

inch

: [ɪntʃ] : [ɪntʃ]

n.;〈

v.使

inches  inching  inched  

v.crawl,shuffle,edge,creep

n.1.2.,,3.,,4.1.2.,,3.,,4.

v.1.使,使,使2.,

n.1.a unit for measuring length. An inch is equal to 2.54 centimeters. There are 12 inches in one foot; an amount of rain, snow, soil, etc. that would cover a surface with a layer that is one inch deep; a very small distance or amount

v.1.to move somewhere very slowly and gradually, or to make something do this2.to gradually become greater or smaller in amount or number

1. impulse function inching incompatibility principle ...

2. hook cavity inching lug ...

3. idle stage inching isothermal forging ...

4. inching power inching inching ...

5. ... 4.1.44 single-phasing 4.1.45 inching 4.1.46 crawling ...

6. ... regenerative braking inching short-circuit ratio ...

7.

:,,,,,使,,,,

1.Perhaps, relief: that the dark decades of soaring population growth, inching economic growth and intractable poverty, are finally over.

2.The summer may have brought a brief health scare for the French president, but on other fronts matters seem to be inching his way.

3.LIKE it or not, the prospect of being able to use mobile phones on aeroplanes is inching ever closer.使

4.Gromph's white, winged brows met in a frown, and he tensed for battle, his hand inching toward one of the deadly wands on his belt.

5.The state added thousands of jobs each month, more than any other state, although unemployment kept inching upwards.

6.I had come to Cairo hoping for a step forward in a strategy that had been inching ahead for four years.

7.He began a complicated maneuver strengthening his position in the Arab world while inching Egypt toward a more realistic national posture.使姿

8.Still, that group appeared to be inching toward engagement with the regime.

9.After 30 minutes, and with the flight to Lemberg already boarding, the queue is only inching forward. Then it stops altogether.30

10.As the millennia passed, ancient, buried faults that had been compressed and locked tight began inching closer to catastrophic failure.