train
英[treɪn]
美[tren]
- n. 火车;行列;长队;裙裾
- v. 培养;训练;瞄准
- n. (Train)人名;(英)特雷恩;(法)特兰;(意)特拉因
英英释意
- 1. public transport provided by a line of railway cars coupled together and drawn by a locomotive;
- "express trains don't stop at Princeton Junction"
- 2. a sequentially ordered set of things or events or ideas in which each successive member is related to the preceding;
- "a string of islands"
- "train of mourners"
- "a train of thought"
- 3. a procession (of wagons or mules or camels) traveling together in single file;
- "we were part of a caravan of almost a thousand camels"
- "they joined the wagon train for safety"
- 4. a series of consequences wrought by an event;
- "it led to a train of disasters"
- 5. piece of cloth forming the long back section of a gown that is drawn along the floor;
- "the bride's train was carried by her two young nephews"
- 6. wheelwork consisting of a connected set of rotating gears by which force is transmitted or motion or torque is changed;
- "the fool got his tie caught in the geartrain"