2020年2月9日 星期日

staple, pop up, pop Prozac, pop-up restaurant/hospitals, champagne corks were popped,


China’s pop-up hospitals do not merely awe foreigners. They have become a staple of domestic propaganda

The first around-the-world flight was completed on this day in 1924. Ninety-one years later, scientists are attempting to do the same thing—this time with a solar-powered plane

A revolutionary solar-powered aircraft touched down recently at Moffett Airfield, in the heart of Silicon Valley. No champagne corks were popped, however, for it...
ECON.ST



The family that pops Prozac together stays together, perhaps, but the family that piles into an old Volkswagen bus the color of a banana surely has more entertainment value.



Katie Grand, the stylist’s stylist and editor of the eagerly anticipated new magazine called Love, is all about her friends. So when she decided to hold a tea and treasure hunt, she turned to David Waddington, a co-owner of London’s pop-up restaurant FLASH, for the site.



Mr. Blakeman is far from the average disgruntled Hollywood hack. A former deputy assistant to President Bush, he served in the White House until 2004. He has appeared as a character in the HBO docudrama “Recount” and pops up frequently as a commentator on Fox News and other cable outlets.



pop up phrasal verb INFORMAL
to appear or happen, especially suddenly or unexpectedly:
She's one of those film stars who pops up everywhere, on TV, in magazines, on Broadway.
The words 'Hard disk failure - program aborted' popped up on the screen.

pop-up
noun [C] (ALSO pop fly)
in baseball, a ball which is hit very high in the air but not very far

pop-up
adjective
pop-up machine/book, etc. a machine, book, etc. which has parts that push out from a surface or from inside:
a pop-up toaster
a pop-up children's book
See also pop-up (menu).


pop-up restaurant 臨時暫時冒出的美食餐廳

pop-up

adj.
  1. Emerging quickly from a recessed or concealed position when activated: pop-up gun emplacements.
  2. Rising to form a three-dimensional structure when a page is opened: pop-up illustrations in a children's book.
n.
  1. A device or illustration that pops up.
  2. Baseball. See pop fly.
adj. - 彈出的, 彈起的
n. - 打到內野或易被接殺的高飛球
idioms:
  • pop-up menu 彈出式操作指引
  • pop-up utility 彈出式使用程式
  • pop-up window 彈出式視窗


Idioms: pop up

Suddenly appear, as in After a brief warm spell all the flowers popped up, or He's constantly popping up where he's least expected.



Prozac"百憂解"
pop

  1. Slang.
    1. To take (drugs), especially orally: “To calm a case of the jitters . . . the bride popped Valium” (People).
    2. To have (a drink): popped a few beers after work.
n.

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