recess的意思和读音

recess

: [rɪˈses] : [rɪˈses]

v.

n.

recesses  recessing  recessed  

adj.+n.congressional recess

n.alcove,nook,indentation,niche,bay

recessn.

1.[c][u]a period of time during the year when the members of a parliament, committee, etc. do not meet

2.[c]a short break in a trial in court

The judge called a short recess.

3.[u]a period of time between lessons at school

4.[c]a part of a wall that is set further back than the rest of the wall, forming a space

a recess for books

5.[c][usupl]the part of a place that is furthest from the light and hard to see or get to

He stared into the dark recesses of the room.

The doubt was still there, in the deep recesses of her mind.

v.

1.[t][i]~ (sth)to take or to order a recess

The hearing was recessed for the weekend.

2.[t]~ sth (in/into sth));to put sth in a position that is set back into a wall, etc.

recessed shelves

n.1.(,),,;;;【】(),2.,;()();〈〉()3.;,4.,1.(,),,;;;【】(),2.,;()();〈〉()3.;,4.,

v.1.使;...,2.〉(),,

n.1.a short time between periods of work in an official organization, especially a court or parliament; a period between school classes when students can eat, rest, or play. The British word is break.2.a space in a room where part of a wall is farther back than the rest of it

v.1.to have a recess between periods of work

1. successive recess recession 退 ...

2. your honor: recess incline ...

3. re- recess alcove ...

4. rapporteur recess referendum ...

5. ( ) ream 263 、 recess 264 、 hollowing block 265 、 ...

6. recess recess concave ...

7. movie n. <> recess n. <> soccer n. <> ...

8. ( hole) ( recess) ( concretion) ...

:,,,,,,,,,,,

1.The fifteen minutes seemed an hour, but they came to an end at last, and the word 'Recess! ' had never seemed so welcome to her before.”,

2.I have not allowed myself, sir, to look beyond the Union, to see what might lie hidden in the dark recess behind.

3.The president has said he wants Congress to finish the work on the legislation before it's its traditional long summer recess in August.8

4.The principal's response was to introduce an extra gym class every week and give the children more freedom during recess.

5.If the boys do not finish their homework, they must do so the next day during recess.

6.Madge took Levitt's advice, retreating as fast as she could, and dragging Jeanie along with her into a sort of recess.

7.Each of the segments has a recess making up a magnetic reluctance portion and an opposite pair of ends making up salient-pole portions.

8.The full Senate will take up the matter after this week's Thanksgiving recess, with the leadership keen to pass it before Christmas.

9.In particular embodiments, the integrated subassembly is inserted into a recess in a housing of a shaving razor.

10.In recording a purchase, the plate was laid into a recess in the imprinter, with a paper "charge slip" positioned on top of it.