| 释义 | 
		Definition of hardtail in English: hardtailnoun ˈhɑːdteɪl 1A bicycle or motorcycle that has suspension at the front but not at the rear.  there are a few key skills that will allow you to ride a hardtail effectively as modifier a nice hardtail mountain bike Example sentencesExamples -  While we say the hardtail has seen its day, there still remains room for that rider who appreciates the simplicity and function of a well-tuned steel mountain bike.
 -  A completely custom rear end had to be engineered for racers who still crave this ultimate weight savings of a hardtail.
 -  There are still a number of folks who'd prefer to gussy-up a hardtail rather than drop the big bucks on a new bike.
 -  Most hardtail mountain bikes are aluminum; only a rebellious handful are steel.
 -  I presently live in the flattest part of the country where the course takes me 45 seconds on a hardtail.
 -  It's a hardtail, so you can't go warbling on about braking and pedal feedback.
 -  I found this bike to handle the rougher descents with more control than a hardtail.
 -  With the cross-country course offering predominantly dry, fast road conditions, it was no surprise that most of pro men chose to run hardtail rigs.
 -  One of our forum moderators and has only ever ridden a hardtail.
 -  There's still something magical about the ride of a smartly tuned steel hardtail.
 
 2An electric guitar with a fixed bridge.  the tuning stability of a hardtail as modifier a hardtail bridge Example sentencesExamples -  Both are available in hardtail and vibrato tail versions.
 -  Its longer scale and hardtail bridge make it comfortable to play compared to the short-scale vintage pieces.
 -  It is made with rosewood on the fretboard and a hardtail bridge.
 -  the black hardtail was lovely, but the white one was very artificial sounding and just seemed more uncomfortable to play.
 -  The bridge is a fixed hardtail, looks and plays like a normal Strat style trem, just bolted down for stability.
 -  If this was hardtail with a neck pickup, I'd consider it.
 -  It's one of those white, hardtail, three bolt strats with a maple neck.
 -  I would love a hardtail strat.
 -  The R-trem can lock with a clip to act as a hardtail.
 -  It was a hardtail, which was kind of interesting, and I really got into that.
 -  This union also creates a greater breakpoint allowing open strings to maintain pitch when bending another, much like a hardtail.
 
 3A blue runner (fish). See runner (sense 9) Example sentencesExamples -  The medium-sized hardtail scad fish was sold cheaply the main market today.
 -  A lot of small fish will do the job—Spanish mackerel, bluefish—but the preferred bait is the hardtail.
 -  Our waters teemed with Spanish sardines, threadfins, and hardtails.
 -  The amberjack latched on to the foot-long hardtail they were using for bait.
 -  He said the Spanish mackerel, baby bonito and hardtails like to feed on the minnows.
 -  We are already seeing large schools of Spanish sardines and hardtails taking up residence on local artificial reefs, ledges, channel markers and wrecks.
 
    Definition of hardtail in US English: hardtailnoun 1A bicycle or motorcycle that has suspension at the front but not at the rear.  there are a few key skills that will allow you to ride a hardtail effectively as modifier a nice hardtail mountain bike Example sentencesExamples -  While we say the hardtail has seen its day, there still remains room for that rider who appreciates the simplicity and function of a well-tuned steel mountain bike.
 -  A completely custom rear end had to be engineered for racers who still crave this ultimate weight savings of a hardtail.
 -  I found this bike to handle the rougher descents with more control than a hardtail.
 -  I presently live in the flattest part of the country where the course takes me 45 seconds on a hardtail.
 -  There are still a number of folks who'd prefer to gussy-up a hardtail rather than drop the big bucks on a new bike.
 -  Most hardtail mountain bikes are aluminum; only a rebellious handful are steel.
 -  With the cross-country course offering predominantly dry, fast road conditions, it was no surprise that most of pro men chose to run hardtail rigs.
 -  It's a hardtail, so you can't go warbling on about braking and pedal feedback.
 -  One of our forum moderators and has only ever ridden a hardtail.
 -  There's still something magical about the ride of a smartly tuned steel hardtail.
 
 2An electric guitar with a fixed bridge.  the tuning stability of a hardtail as modifier a hardtail bridge Example sentencesExamples -  If this was hardtail with a neck pickup, I'd consider it.
 -  The bridge is a fixed hardtail, looks and plays like a normal Strat style trem, just bolted down for stability.
 -  It's one of those white, hardtail, three bolt strats with a maple neck.
 -  Its longer scale and hardtail bridge make it comfortable to play compared to the short-scale vintage pieces.
 -  This union also creates a greater breakpoint allowing open strings to maintain pitch when bending another, much like a hardtail.
 -  the black hardtail was lovely, but the white one was very artificial sounding and just seemed more uncomfortable to play.
 -  It is made with rosewood on the fretboard and a hardtail bridge.
 -  It was a hardtail, which was kind of interesting, and I really got into that.
 -  The R-trem can lock with a clip to act as a hardtail.
 -  Both are available in hardtail and vibrato tail versions.
 -  I would love a hardtail strat.
 
 3A blue runner (fish). See runner (sense 9) Example sentencesExamples -  A lot of small fish will do the job—Spanish mackerel, bluefish—but the preferred bait is the hardtail.
 -  He said the Spanish mackerel, baby bonito and hardtails like to feed on the minnows.
 -  The amberjack latched on to the foot-long hardtail they were using for bait.
 -  The medium-sized hardtail scad fish was sold cheaply the main market today.
 -  Our waters teemed with Spanish sardines, threadfins, and hardtails.
 -  We are already seeing large schools of Spanish sardines and hardtails taking up residence on local artificial reefs, ledges, channel markers and wrecks.
 
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