| 释义 | 
		Definition of rainswept in English: rainsweptadjectiveˈreɪnswɛptˈreɪnswɛpt Exposed to or frequently experiencing rain and wind. 遭风雨袭击的;风雨交加的 遭风雨袭击的码头区。 Example sentencesExamples -  She competed in an era when Allan Wells beat the rest of the world after training on rainswept tracks in Edinburgh without money, but not motivation.
 -  From the time she was a young woman, Carr had been determined to find her own way of portraying the densely forested, mountainous west coast of Canada with its rainswept climate.
 -  The gala screening took place in a rainswept Leicester Square in the presence of many celebrities.
 -  I suppose he's doing a lot of standing around on rainswept balconies, and staring out into the middle distance, and not finishing his sentences, right?
 -  Where yesterday the supermarket was closed and the carpark empty and rainswept, today both of them were crowded with too many cars and far too many people.
 -  From our breakfast perch on the verandah high above a rainswept gorge dotted with palms, frangipani, hibiscus and pink orchids, the rain was positively uplifting.
 -  Tonight I read of rugged Newfoundland coastlines and dream of fog-drenched villages and rainswept fishing boats.
 -  ‘My life is here,’ she says, gesturing at the rainswept green gardens outside her kitchen window.
 -  Some landscapes seem designed for the NHH treatment, such as the dizzying view of Mizen Head, a rainswept Brittas Bay, and Farm on the Healy Pass.
 -  These small rainswept isles off the western end of the vast Eurasian landmass have contributed far more to the well-being of the rest of humanity than any other country, bar none.
 -  Pocklington were without half a dozen key players due to injury and unavailability and they left a dry and sunny Pocklington to find Ilkley rainswept and waterlogged.
 -  Close finishes were a feature of the second of the Kendal Winter League series of races at a wind and rainswept Firbank, near Sedbergh, on Sunday.
 -  With its drystone hedges, bedraggled cottages, enigmatic stone menhirs, and rainswept green fields, Jejudo has something of a Celtic feel.
 -  Afternoon turned into evening, evening into a dismal, dark, rainswept night.
 -  They spend their nights not in front of fire and telly, but walking the rainswept streets canvassing votes, or in draughty committee rooms hammering out policy.
 -  Tucking in behind his rival on the rainswept circuit, he audaciously out-braked him on the inside of the final bend to steal ahead and win.
 -  It's a long long 20 minute wait beside a rainswept parade of shops before the following bus catches up and we can continue.
 -  The Admiral remembers all too clearly returning from long Cold War submarine patrols, and having to queue on a rainswept jetty to use a phone.
 -  And it was Lynam who was in charge of the BBC's Wimbledon coverage on that terrifying, rainswept afternoon in 1996 when Cliff Richard sang to Centre Court.
 -  These kids should be dragged around rainswept mountains and lakes rather than be allowed to spend time - and your money - in seaside arcades.
 
    Definition of rainswept in US English: rainsweptadjectiveˈreɪnswɛptˈrānswept Exposed to or frequently experiencing rain and wind. 遭风雨袭击的;风雨交加的  a rainswept day in November Example sentencesExamples -  They spend their nights not in front of fire and telly, but walking the rainswept streets canvassing votes, or in draughty committee rooms hammering out policy.
 -  These small rainswept isles off the western end of the vast Eurasian landmass have contributed far more to the well-being of the rest of humanity than any other country, bar none.
 -  Close finishes were a feature of the second of the Kendal Winter League series of races at a wind and rainswept Firbank, near Sedbergh, on Sunday.
 -  From our breakfast perch on the verandah high above a rainswept gorge dotted with palms, frangipani, hibiscus and pink orchids, the rain was positively uplifting.
 -  Tucking in behind his rival on the rainswept circuit, he audaciously out-braked him on the inside of the final bend to steal ahead and win.
 -  Tonight I read of rugged Newfoundland coastlines and dream of fog-drenched villages and rainswept fishing boats.
 -  ‘My life is here,’ she says, gesturing at the rainswept green gardens outside her kitchen window.
 -  Where yesterday the supermarket was closed and the carpark empty and rainswept, today both of them were crowded with too many cars and far too many people.
 -  Some landscapes seem designed for the NHH treatment, such as the dizzying view of Mizen Head, a rainswept Brittas Bay, and Farm on the Healy Pass.
 -  Pocklington were without half a dozen key players due to injury and unavailability and they left a dry and sunny Pocklington to find Ilkley rainswept and waterlogged.
 -  She competed in an era when Allan Wells beat the rest of the world after training on rainswept tracks in Edinburgh without money, but not motivation.
 -  With its drystone hedges, bedraggled cottages, enigmatic stone menhirs, and rainswept green fields, Jejudo has something of a Celtic feel.
 -  I suppose he's doing a lot of standing around on rainswept balconies, and staring out into the middle distance, and not finishing his sentences, right?
 -  It's a long long 20 minute wait beside a rainswept parade of shops before the following bus catches up and we can continue.
 -  The Admiral remembers all too clearly returning from long Cold War submarine patrols, and having to queue on a rainswept jetty to use a phone.
 -  The gala screening took place in a rainswept Leicester Square in the presence of many celebrities.
 -  From the time she was a young woman, Carr had been determined to find her own way of portraying the densely forested, mountainous west coast of Canada with its rainswept climate.
 -  And it was Lynam who was in charge of the BBC's Wimbledon coverage on that terrifying, rainswept afternoon in 1996 when Cliff Richard sang to Centre Court.
 -  These kids should be dragged around rainswept mountains and lakes rather than be allowed to spend time - and your money - in seaside arcades.
 -  Afternoon turned into evening, evening into a dismal, dark, rainswept night.
 
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