| 释义 | 
		Definition of sloop in English: sloopnoun sluːpslup 1A one-masted sailing boat with a mainsail and jib rigged fore and aft. 单桅帆船 Example sentencesExamples -  Two sloops next to each other might have to move one boat bow in and the other stern in, for example.
 -  Along the edges of the convoys sailed a variety of ships: graceful sloops, chunky corvettes, slim gunboats like the Dutch Soemba, antisubmarine patrol craft, fast PT boats, and everywhere sleek destroyers.
 -  Forget all the sailing ships, the sloops, brigs, schooners and luggers lost here, and concentrate on the steamships.
 -  Fortunately, the skipper has both dogs, as well as kids and crew, in life jackets aboard the family sloop Off Call.
 -  The sloop's rudder had dislodged, leaving a gaping hole below the waterline that could not be closed.
 -  In addition, the wind is often light and, when it blows, amazingly fluky - I can remember sailing almost completely around one of the San Juans without touching our sloop's sheets.
 -  The naturally perfect horseshoe-shaped harbor is filled with mega cruise ships, sailing yachts, sloops, ferryboats, and fishing craft.
 -  The harbor is filled every day with all manner of sleek vessels - from 10-foot kayaks, to 30-foot sloops, to oceangoing cargo ships that stretch almost 1,000 feet from stem to stern.
 -  Not that there was any shortage of new sailing craft on display - mostly glittering sloops with racing pedigrees as long as your arm.
 -  In right field some 50 boats - sloops to kayaks - idled in the cove, swimmers hopeful of retrieving any home run ball hit into the drink.
 -  Johnson is a tacky tuna boat owner who buys the sloop out from under Ross, but then offers him a chance to ‘buy it back’ by indenturing him to captain his fishing fleet.
 -  For most coastal cruising conditions the sloop would be the preferred rig on this size boat but, perhaps for aesthetic reasons, most were rigged with the double headsail arrangement.
 -  A small sloop approaches the shore ferrying a group of passengers from Gloucester.
 -  Matt followed Katherine's lead and moved out onto the tiny foredeck of the sloop.
 -  A procession of big cruising sloops was entering the marina, and I suddenly realized that their skippers intended to dock under sail.
 -  I like storms even though one tried to kill me a few years ago, late at night on a 36-foot sloop with its full mainsail still stupidly up, twenty miles from the nearest shore of Lake Superior.
 -  Of the forty vessels registered in that year, thirty-seven were described as lighters, one as a boat and two as sloops.
 -  When you round Cove Point, the sun, like a low red host, has migrated west of the church steeple over the anchorage of sloops and ketches into what will soon be night past the carcass of a skiff almost hidden in the weeds.
 -  In tugs and sloops and rowboats, citizen watchdog groups have launched a campaign to protect America's waterways.
 -  When he stood, he glanced out the window and was able to see just the top of the mast of the anchored sloop.
 
 - 1.1historical  A small square-rigged sailing warship with two or three masts.
〈史〉(两至三桅的)小型战舰 Example sentencesExamples -  In July 1798, Stephen Decatur, on the sloop Delaware, captured the French schooner Croyable off New Jersey.
 -  Again, that's great stuff for kids - it's pirates, it's pistols, it's cutlasses, it's galleons and sloops and swords.
 -  Stark paused for a moment to look out on the British sloops and transport ships in the harbor, then ran across the ridgeline of Breed's Hill toward his troops, two hundred New Hampshire militiamen.
 -  A collection of tattered men o'war and patched sloops is firing directly over the decks of the old admiral's flagship and into the area of HMS Brown.
 -  The colony of Victoria, also concerned with its security, acquired the steam sloop Victoria in 1855.
 -  Shots were fired from behind and an all out sea battle began, the sloop versus three heavily armed galleons.
 
  - 1.2historical  A small anti-submarine warship used for convoy escort in the Second World War.
〈史〉(二次世界大战时担任反潜任务的)小型护航舰 Example sentencesExamples -  From May 1941 to February 1943 Parker was in HMS Fareham, a sloop operating off the coast of Cyraniaca in support of the Eighth Army in the Western Desert.
 -  Before the war, the Admiralty had developed a sloop design for convoy escort work.
 -  Whimbrel - now ENS Tariq - retains many of the features which helped her and the rest of the Black Swan class of sloops defeat the German U-boats in one of the crucial campaigns of World War II.
 -  In fact, Australia lost just two ships in that campaign - the light cruiser Perth and the small sloop Yarra.
 -  He returned to Australia in 1941 and was appointed in command of the sloop HMAS Yarra in January 1942.
 -  During WWII, while in command of the sloop HMAS Yarra, he and his ship's company put up a valiant fight to protect an Allied convoy from Japanese attack in the Java Sea.
 
  
 
 OriginEarly 17th century: from Dutch sloep(e), of unknown origin. Rhymesbloop, cock-a-hoop, coop, croup, droop, drupe, dupe, goop, group, Guadeloupe, hoop, loop, poop, recoup, roup, scoop, snoop, soup, stoep, stoop, stoup, stupe, swoop, troop, troupe, whoop    Definition of sloop in US English: sloopnounslo͞opslup 1A one-masted sailboat with a fore-and-aft mainsail and a jib. 单桅帆船 Example sentencesExamples -  A small sloop approaches the shore ferrying a group of passengers from Gloucester.
 -  In tugs and sloops and rowboats, citizen watchdog groups have launched a campaign to protect America's waterways.
 -  A procession of big cruising sloops was entering the marina, and I suddenly realized that their skippers intended to dock under sail.
 -  Of the forty vessels registered in that year, thirty-seven were described as lighters, one as a boat and two as sloops.
 -  The harbor is filled every day with all manner of sleek vessels - from 10-foot kayaks, to 30-foot sloops, to oceangoing cargo ships that stretch almost 1,000 feet from stem to stern.
 -  Two sloops next to each other might have to move one boat bow in and the other stern in, for example.
 -  In addition, the wind is often light and, when it blows, amazingly fluky - I can remember sailing almost completely around one of the San Juans without touching our sloop's sheets.
 -  Matt followed Katherine's lead and moved out onto the tiny foredeck of the sloop.
 -  Forget all the sailing ships, the sloops, brigs, schooners and luggers lost here, and concentrate on the steamships.
 -  In right field some 50 boats - sloops to kayaks - idled in the cove, swimmers hopeful of retrieving any home run ball hit into the drink.
 -  When you round Cove Point, the sun, like a low red host, has migrated west of the church steeple over the anchorage of sloops and ketches into what will soon be night past the carcass of a skiff almost hidden in the weeds.
 -  The sloop's rudder had dislodged, leaving a gaping hole below the waterline that could not be closed.
 -  The naturally perfect horseshoe-shaped harbor is filled with mega cruise ships, sailing yachts, sloops, ferryboats, and fishing craft.
 -  I like storms even though one tried to kill me a few years ago, late at night on a 36-foot sloop with its full mainsail still stupidly up, twenty miles from the nearest shore of Lake Superior.
 -  Not that there was any shortage of new sailing craft on display - mostly glittering sloops with racing pedigrees as long as your arm.
 -  When he stood, he glanced out the window and was able to see just the top of the mast of the anchored sloop.
 -  Fortunately, the skipper has both dogs, as well as kids and crew, in life jackets aboard the family sloop Off Call.
 -  Along the edges of the convoys sailed a variety of ships: graceful sloops, chunky corvettes, slim gunboats like the Dutch Soemba, antisubmarine patrol craft, fast PT boats, and everywhere sleek destroyers.
 -  For most coastal cruising conditions the sloop would be the preferred rig on this size boat but, perhaps for aesthetic reasons, most were rigged with the double headsail arrangement.
 -  Johnson is a tacky tuna boat owner who buys the sloop out from under Ross, but then offers him a chance to ‘buy it back’ by indenturing him to captain his fishing fleet.
 
 - 1.1historical  A small square-rigged sailing warship with two or three masts.
〈史〉(两至三桅的)小型战舰 Example sentencesExamples -  A collection of tattered men o'war and patched sloops is firing directly over the decks of the old admiral's flagship and into the area of HMS Brown.
 -  The colony of Victoria, also concerned with its security, acquired the steam sloop Victoria in 1855.
 -  Shots were fired from behind and an all out sea battle began, the sloop versus three heavily armed galleons.
 -  Stark paused for a moment to look out on the British sloops and transport ships in the harbor, then ran across the ridgeline of Breed's Hill toward his troops, two hundred New Hampshire militiamen.
 -  In July 1798, Stephen Decatur, on the sloop Delaware, captured the French schooner Croyable off New Jersey.
 -  Again, that's great stuff for kids - it's pirates, it's pistols, it's cutlasses, it's galleons and sloops and swords.
 
  - 1.2historical  A small antisubmarine warship used for convoy escort in World War II.
〈史〉(二次世界大战时担任反潜任务的)小型护航舰 Example sentencesExamples -  Whimbrel - now ENS Tariq - retains many of the features which helped her and the rest of the Black Swan class of sloops defeat the German U-boats in one of the crucial campaigns of World War II.
 -  During WWII, while in command of the sloop HMAS Yarra, he and his ship's company put up a valiant fight to protect an Allied convoy from Japanese attack in the Java Sea.
 -  In fact, Australia lost just two ships in that campaign - the light cruiser Perth and the small sloop Yarra.
 -  He returned to Australia in 1941 and was appointed in command of the sloop HMAS Yarra in January 1942.
 -  From May 1941 to February 1943 Parker was in HMS Fareham, a sloop operating off the coast of Cyraniaca in support of the Eighth Army in the Western Desert.
 -  Before the war, the Admiralty had developed a sloop design for convoy escort work.
 
  
 
 OriginEarly 17th century: from Dutch sloep(e), of unknown origin.     |