| 释义 | 
		Definition of archer in English: archernoun ˈɑːtʃəˈɑrtʃər 1A person who shoots with a bow and arrows, especially at a target as a sport. 射箭运动员 Example sentencesExamples -  An experienced archer could fire an arrow every five seconds.
 -  To get the most from bow tuning the archer's shooting style must be consistent.
 -  Some archers allow the arrow to rest on the top of their forefinger, some prefer the rest.
 -  Massed ranks of archers would aim their arrows high, to achieve a large range, without particularly careful aiming.
 -  They rode through the wall and into the city flanked by cavalry and archers and soldiers on foot.
 -  But did the Neolithic arrowhead mean that they had found a prehistoric archer?
 -  All young men in medieval villages were expected to practice archery so there were many skilled archers to be found.
 -  In the fourteenth century Edward III incorporated mounted archers using the native longbow into his army.
 -  Each section was divided into three rows - the archers, the infantry and the cavalry.
 -  The English troops, mainly archers and foot soldiers, dug in behind wooden stakes between thickly wooded ground.
 -  Athena, disguised like a Trojan, finds the archer Pandarus to shoot an arrow at Menelaus.
 -  At Falkirk, in more open ground than at Stirling, the English knights and archers were devastating.
 -  If an archer shoots their arrow into the wrong target face, that arrow will not score any points.
 -  The Stoics use the analogy of the archer shooting at a target to explain this notion.
 -  A novice archer would also bow to the target after the first hit of the day, while advanced archers would not.
 -  He prepared special archers and cavalry forces for the battles with the invaders.
 -  Many handbow archers use sights, and latches with triggers called mechanical releases.
 -  It is very important that the arrows are ‘matched’ to the archer and their bow.
 -  Once an archer downed a target, he nocked an arrow while relocating to another firing site.
 -  The size of the bow and the length of the arrow depend entirely upon the size of the archer.
 
 - 1.1the Archer The zodiacal sign or constellation Sagittarius.
人马座  
 
 OriginMiddle English: from Old French archier, based on Latin arcus 'bow'. Rhymesdeparture, kwacha, marcher, starcher, viscacha    Definition of archer in US English: archernounˈärCHərˈɑrtʃər 1A person who shoots with a bow and arrows, especially at a target for sport. 射箭运动员 Example sentencesExamples -  Some archers allow the arrow to rest on the top of their forefinger, some prefer the rest.
 -  It is very important that the arrows are ‘matched’ to the archer and their bow.
 -  They rode through the wall and into the city flanked by cavalry and archers and soldiers on foot.
 -  A novice archer would also bow to the target after the first hit of the day, while advanced archers would not.
 -  The size of the bow and the length of the arrow depend entirely upon the size of the archer.
 -  He prepared special archers and cavalry forces for the battles with the invaders.
 -  An experienced archer could fire an arrow every five seconds.
 -  All young men in medieval villages were expected to practice archery so there were many skilled archers to be found.
 -  Massed ranks of archers would aim their arrows high, to achieve a large range, without particularly careful aiming.
 -  The English troops, mainly archers and foot soldiers, dug in behind wooden stakes between thickly wooded ground.
 -  Many handbow archers use sights, and latches with triggers called mechanical releases.
 -  Once an archer downed a target, he nocked an arrow while relocating to another firing site.
 -  Each section was divided into three rows - the archers, the infantry and the cavalry.
 -  If an archer shoots their arrow into the wrong target face, that arrow will not score any points.
 -  The Stoics use the analogy of the archer shooting at a target to explain this notion.
 -  In the fourteenth century Edward III incorporated mounted archers using the native longbow into his army.
 -  To get the most from bow tuning the archer's shooting style must be consistent.
 -  At Falkirk, in more open ground than at Stirling, the English knights and archers were devastating.
 -  Athena, disguised like a Trojan, finds the archer Pandarus to shoot an arrow at Menelaus.
 -  But did the Neolithic arrowhead mean that they had found a prehistoric archer?
 
 - 1.1the Archer The zodiacal sign or constellation Sagittarius.
人马座  
 
 OriginMiddle English: from Old French archier, based on Latin arcus ‘bow’.     |