MY词语>英语词典>ballooned翻译和用法

ballooned

英 [bəˈluːnd]

美 [bəˈluːnd]

v.  (突然)膨胀,涨大; 乘热气球飞行
balloon的过去分词和过去式

柯林斯词典

  • N-COUNT 气球
    Aballoonis a small, thin, rubber bag that you blow air into so that it becomes larger and rounder or longer. Balloons are used as toys or decorations.
    1. She popped a balloon with her fork.
      她用叉子戳破了一个气球。
  • N-COUNT 热气球
    Aballoonis a large, strong bag filled with gas or hot air, which can carry passengers in a container that hangs underneath it.
    1. They are to attempt to be the first to circle the Earth non-stop by balloon.
      他们试图完成乘热气球不间断环球飞行的创举。
  • VERB (数量)激增,猛涨,快速膨胀
    When somethingballoons, it increases rapidly in amount.
    1. In London, the use of the Tube has ballooned...
      在伦敦,坐地铁的人激增。
    2. The budget deficit has ballooned to $25 billion...
      预算赤字已经猛增到250亿美元。

双语例句

  • As it affected her more and more, the font size in her emails ballooned to cartoonish sizes.
    因为它影响到她的越来越多,她的电子邮件中的字体大小膨胀到卡通的大小。
  • Costs were simply omitted-and eventually ballooned to well over twice the original appropriation.
    建筑成本只是被疏忽了-最终资金的耗费竟然剧增到最初计划拨款的两倍。
  • Free memory is reclaimed first so guests with more unused memory are ballooned the most.
    首先回收空闲内存,从而具有更多未用内存的客户膨胀最多。
  • Structured issuance ballooned to$ 2 trillion last year and grew in complexity.
    去年结构化证券发行飙升至2万亿美元,复杂程度也不断增加。
  • Total debts owed by the government, companies and households have ballooned to 240 per cent of gross domestic product, virtually double the level at the time of the global financial crisis.
    政府、公司和家庭的负债总额与国内生产总值(GDP)之比大幅增加至240%,相当于金融危机时的两倍。
  • In London, the use of the Tube has ballooned
    在伦敦,坐地铁的人激增。
  • Trade deficits have ballooned.
    贸易逆差急速增大。
  • Auditing expenses ballooned soon after the law was introduced.
    该法实施之后,审计费用剧增。
  • In short, it could be a slowdown in the Internet economy that has ballooned over the last decade.
    简言之,过去十年激增的互联网经济可能会放缓发展速度。
  • Current account deficits ballooned, with capital inflows accelerating up to the eve of the crisis.
    由于直到危机发生的前夜,资本流入加速,经常账盈余迅速扩大。