upsurge的意思和读音

upsurge

: [ˈʌpˌsɜrdʒ] : [ˈʌpˌsɜː(r)dʒ]

v.

n.

upsurges  

n.decrease

n.increase,surge,rise,gain,expansion

upsurgen.

1.a sudden large increase in sth

an upsurge in violent crime

a recent upsurge of interest in his movies

v.1.,2.

n.1.;

n.1.a sudden increase in something

1. surge upsurge gauge ...

2. 〖 warmheartedness〗 upsurge〖 teachwhatsomeonejustlearn〗 ...

3. unsecured account upsurge , unsecured bond ...

4. upstroke upsurge upsweep ...

5. unsecured account upsurge , unsecured bond ...

6. ... sulfur n. upsurge n. austere adj. ...

7. typhoid upsurge vasoconstrictive 使 ...

8. Pentateuch - n. 西 upsurge - n. patriarch - n. ...

:,,,,,,,,

1.Though Russians do not now believe it, there was a genuine upsurge of goodwill in the west, and a desire to help.西

2.An upsurge in economic construction is bound to be followed by an upsurge of construction in the cultural sphere.

3.Foreigners in Germany, there have been a small upsurge in house, most of the type of real estate investment business.

4.China's first boxing training centre has been set up in Guangzhou aimed at bringing on an upsurge in this yet to be systemized event.(china)广(program)

5.Since the concept of basic vocabulary was proposed, the domesticscholars have raised a study upsurge of the basic vocabulary.

6.If Mao could identify himself and his party with the new upsurge of patriotic feeling created by the Japanese war, so much the better.

7.At least 10 people have been killed in an upsurge of violence in Nigeria on the eve of Saturday's parliamentary elections.

8.There is still little evidence of a strong upsurge in private-sector final demand in high-income countries.

9.It was a strange time, marked by a widespread feeling of disillusionment which burgeoned in a sudden upsurge of satire.

10.During the same month, there was an upsurge in anti-nuclear petitions in response to Kuboyama's death, and the peace movement went national.