steeper的意思和读音

steeper

n.〔16°-26°〕;〔16°-26°〕;〔16°-26°〕;

v.使;(,,)(,);使…;(,,)(,);使;(,,)(,);使;(,,)(,)

adj.;〈〉()

线

steeperadj.

1.rising or falling quickly, not gradually

a steep hill/slope/bank

a steep climb/descent/drop

a steep flight of stairs

The path grew steeper as we climbed higher.

2.[ubn]sudden and very big

a steep decline in the birth rate

a steep rise in unemployment

3.(informal)too much; unreasonable

£2 for a cup of coffee seems a little steep to me. 2

v.IDM

a city steeped in history

be steeped in sthto have a lot of a particular quality

a city steeped in history

n.1.;

adj.1.“steep”

adj.1.The comparative of steep

1. ^ steely wool ^ steeper ^ steeping machine ...

2. ... creeper steeper weeper ...

5.crombie(steeper)

6. strainedfood ① steeper stee…

:,,,,,,〔16°-26°〕,,使,,使,,,,,,,,,,,,,线,

1.There have been quite a few changes in the midfield recently. Has that made it a steeper learning curve for you?

2.In four of these areas the decline was much steeper than in comparable parts of the city where Operation Ceasefire was not in place.

3.Then the climbing got steeper, the sun got redder, and pretty soon I began to see patches of snow in the shade of some rocks.

4.The parallel price falls would have been even steeper if the potash industry had not cut production by 40 per cent.40%,

5.But although discounting has helped offset even steeper declines, it has eaten up the revenues of hotel chains and of the government.

6.Those risks were even steeper for children of stressed, high-income moms and for kids with at least one sibling.

7.Without China stepping up to the plate, any global downturn would be steeper and longer.

8.Granted, Japan sailed serenely through the Wall Street crash of 1987, only to drop off its own much steeper precipice two years later.1987

9.But such completeness brings with it additional complexity and a steeper learning curve .线

10.Every step of the way feels a bit like climbing a really steep set of stairs, which becomes steeper the higher it goes.