apple [ 'æpl] n.苹果,苹果树
apple ['æpl] n. 苹果
Apple ['æpl] n.苹果公司
珍爱之人或物 apple of one's eyes
Apple 苹果
Fuji Apple 红富士苹果
apple-polish 逢迎;讨好
apple 苹果
wax-apple 莲雾
冰糖葫芦 a stick of sugar-coated haws (or apples,etc.)
Apple Computers 苹果电脑
I'll share my apple with you, if you'll give me half of your cake.
你把你的蛋糕给我一半,我就和你分享我的苹果。
After eating the apple he threw the core away.
吃完苹果,他将核扔了。
Apples at $1.50 per kilo.
苹果每公斤1.5美元。
Someone threw an apple core.
有人扔了颗苹果核。
This apple is really sour!
这个苹果真酸!
We have apple pie for dinner at times.
晚餐我们有时吃苹果馅饼。
After sharing out the apples, there were two left over.
这些苹果分完后还剩下两个。
I gave the children two apples each and I had three left over.
我给孩子们每人两个苹果,我还剩下三个。
Yes, please. I want an apple.
是的,我要一个苹果。
What do you like best, apples, pears, or bananas?
苹果,梨,香蕉,你最喜欢哪个?
An apple is a kind of fruit.
苹果是一种水果。
The apple trees are blossoming.
苹果树正在开花。
There are five apples on the table.
桌子上有五个苹果。
The apple trees are fruiting early this year.
今年苹果树很早结果。
Green apples are sour.
未成熟的苹果是酸的。
I am cooking apple pies with my newly bought frying pan.
我正在用我新买的煎锅做苹果馅饼。
These apples cost five yuan per kilogram.
这些苹果每公斤五元。
Would you like some more apple pies?
再来点苹果馅饼好吗?
Which one do you prefer, an apple or an orange?
你想要哪个,苹果还是橘子?
These apples are not ripe; they are sour.
这些苹果不熟,是酸的。
He put the apples on a round plate.
他把苹果放在一个圆盘子里。
Several of the apples are bad.
苹果中好几个烂了。
玲玲是她爷爷的掌上明珠。
LIng Ling is the apple of her grandpa‘s eye.
I'm going to get some apples.
我要去买一些苹果。
We have apples and peaches.
我们有苹果和桃子。
In order to get the promotion, she kept apple-polishing the manager.
为了升迁,她一直在拍经理的马屁。
An apple a day keeps the doctor away.
日吃苹果一只,身体健康不求医。
One rotten apple spoils the whole barrel.
一只烂苹果烂一萝苹果。
There is a small choice in rotten apples.
朽木不可雕。
The rotten apple injuries its neighbours.
一只死老鼠,弄赃粥一锅。
Throw away the apple because of the core.
因噎废食。
An apple a day keeps the doctor away.
Anonymous
每日一个苹果胜过灵丹妙药。
无名氏
How many a pear which presents a blooming face to the would is rotten at the core, How many an innocent-looking apple, is harbouring a worm in the bud,. But the orange has no secret faults. Its outside is a mirror of its inside.
Allen.A.Milne,American writer
表面鲜嫩可爱,内核变坏的梨子在这个世界上不知有多少。看上去纯净无瑕内心早就长了虫的苹果,在这个世界上不知有多少。然而橙子却毫无缺点可以隐瞒,它的外部就是它内心的一面镜子。
美国作家米尔恩.A.A
apple-polish 逢迎;讨好
苹果馅饼 apple pie
槟子 [bīn zi ] /binzi/a species of apple which is slightly sour and astringent/
喉结 [hóu jié] /Adam's' apple/
莲雾 [lián wù] /wax apple (a reddish pear-shaped fruit)/
柰 [nài] /crab-apple/how can one help/
苹 [píng] /apple/
苹果 [píng guǒ] /apple/
苹果电脑 [píng guǒ diàn nǎo] /Apple computer/
苹果汁 [píng guǒ zhī] /apple juice/
棠 [táng] /cherry-apple/
Sir Isaac Newton supposedly discovered gravity through the fall of an apple.
艾萨克·牛顿爵士通过苹果落地发现了万有引力。
Apples had been falling in many places for centuries and thousands of people had seen them fall.
多少个世纪以来,苹果一直在许多地方落到地面,也有成千上万的人看到过苹果落地。
But Newton for years had been curious about the cause of the orbital motion of the moon and planets.
多年来牛顿一直对月球和行星绕轨道运行的起因好奇不已。
What kept them in place?
是什么使它们处于现在的位置呢?
Why didn't they fall out of the sky?
它们为什么不落到天空之外呢?
The fact that the apple fell down toward the earth and not up into the tree answered the question he had been asking himself about those larger fruits of the heavens, the moon and the planets.
苹果向下落到地面不是向上飞到树上,这一事实回答了他长期以来一直对天空中更大果实——月球和行星所存有的疑问。
How many men would have considered the possibility of an apple falling up into the tree?
多少人会考虑过苹果向上飞到树上的可能性呢?
Newton did because he was not trying to predict anything.
牛顿考虑过,因为他不想对任何事情进行预测。
{adj: apple-scented} smelling of apples
{adj: apple-shaped} having the general shape of an apple
{adj: apple-sized} having the approximate size of an apple
{adj: attributive, prenominal} of adjectives; placed before the nouns they modify
"`red' is an attributive adjective in `a red apple'"
<-> predicative
{adj: crisp, firm, crunchy} pleasingly firm and fresh and making a crunching noise when chewed
"crisp carrot and celery sticks"
"a firm apple"
"crunchy lettuce"
{adj: many} a quantifier that can be used with count nouns and is often preceded by `as' or `too' or `so' or `that'; amounting to a large but indefinite number
"many temptations"
"the temptations are many"
"a good many"
"a great many"
"many directions"
"take as many apples as you like"
"too many clouds to see"
"never saw so many people"
<-> few
{adj: most} (superlative of `many' used with count nouns and often preceded by `the') quantifier meaning the greatest in number
"who has the most apples?"
"most people like eggs"
"most fishes have fins"
<-> fewest
{adj: predicative} of adjectives; relating to or occurring within the predicate of a sentence
"`red' is a predicative adjective in `the apple is red'"
<-> attributive
{adj: raining} falling in drops or as if falling like rain
"watched the raining apple blossoms"
{adj: recent} being new in a time not long past
"recent graduates"
"a recent addition to the house"
"recent buds on the apple trees"
{adj: some} quantifier; used with either mass nouns or plural count nouns to indicate an unspecified number or quantity
"have some milk"
"some roses were still blooming"
"having some friends over"
"some apples"
"some paper"
<-> no, all
{adj: still} used of pictures; of a single or static photograph not presented so as to create the illusion of motion; or representing objects not capable of motion
"a still photograph"
"Cezanne's still life of apples"
<-> moving
{adv: a la mode} with ice cream on top or on the side
"we served the apple pie a la mode"
{n: American crab apple, garland crab, Malus coronaria} medium-sized tree of the eastern United States having pink blossoms and small yellow fruit
{n: Amphibolips, genus Amphibolips} cynipid gall wasps, especially causing oak-apple galls
{n: Annonaceae, family Annonaceae, custard-apple family} chiefly tropical trees or shrubs
{n: Baldwin} an American eating apple with red or yellow and red skin
{n: Barbados gooseberry, blade apple} small yellow to orange fruit of the Barbados gooseberry cactus used in desserts and preserves and jellies
{n: Bramley's Seedling} very large cooking apple
{n: Calvados} dry apple brandy made in Normandy
{n: Chapman, John Chapman, Johnny Appleseed} United States pioneer who planted apple trees as he traveled (1774-1845)
{n: Comstock mealybug, Comstock's mealybug, Pseudococcus comstocki} Asiatic insect introduced accidentally into United States; pest on citrus and apple trees
{n: Cortland} large apple with a red skin
{n: Crataegus, genus Crataegus} thorny shrubs and small trees: hawthorn; thorn; thorn apple
{n: Datura, genus Datura} thorn apple
{n: Delicious} variety of sweet eating apples
{n: Empire} an eating apple that somewhat resembles a McIntosh; used as both an eating and a cooking apple
{n: Golden Delicious, Yellow Delicious} a sweet eating apple with yellow skin
{n: Granny Smith} apple with a green skin and hard tart flesh
{n: Grimes' golden} yellow apple that ripens in late autumn; eaten raw
{n: Gymnosporangium, genus Gymnosporangium} genus of fungi that produce galls on cedars and other conifers of genera Juniperus and Libocedrus and causes rust spots on apples and pears and other plants of family Rosaceae
{n: Hesperides, Atlantides} (Greek mythology) group of 3 to 7 nymphs who guarded the golden apples that Gaea gave as a wedding gift to Hera
{n: Idun, Ithunn} (Norse mythology) goddess of spring and wife of Bragi; guarded the apples that kept the gods eternally young
{n: Iowa crab, Iowa crab apple, prairie crab, western crab apple, Malus ioensis} wild crab apple of western United States with fragrant pink flowers
{n: Jambos, genus Jambos} used in some classifications for rose apples (Eugenia jambos)
{n: Jonathan} red late-ripening apple; primarily eaten raw
{n: Lane's Prince Albert} apple used primarily in cooking
{n: Malus, genus Malus} apple trees; found throughout temperate zones of the northern hemisphere
{n: May apple} edible but insipid fruit of the May apple plant
{n: McIntosh} early-ripening apple popular in the northeastern United States; primarily eaten raw but suitable for applesauce
{n: Newtown Wonder} apple used primarily in cooking
{n: Northern Spy} large late-ripening apple with skin striped with yellow and red
{n: Oregon crab apple, Malus fusca} small tree or shrub of western United States having white blossoms and tiny yellow or red fruit
{n: Pearmain} any of several varieties of apples with red skins
{n: Pippin} any of numerous superior eating apples with yellow or greenish yellow skin flushed with red
{n: Prima} used primarily as eating apples
{n: Red Delicious} a sweet eating apple with bright red skin; most widely grown apple worldwide
{n: Rome Beauty} large red apple used primarily for baking
{n: Siberian crab, Siberian crab apple, cherry apple, cherry crab, Malus baccata} Asian wild crab apple cultivated in many varieties for it small acid usually red fruit used for preserving
{n: Southern crab apple, flowering crab, Malus angustifolia} small tree or shrub of southeastern United States; cultivated as an ornamental for its rose-colored blossoms
{n: Spanish tamarind, Vangueria madagascariensis} shrubby tree of Madagascar occasionally cultivated for its edible apple-shaped fruit
{n: Stayman Winesap} crisp tart apple; good for eating raw and suitable for cooking
{n: Stayman} apple grown chiefly in the Shenandoah Valley
{n: Tell, William Tell} a Swiss patriot who lived in the early 14th century and who was renowned for his skill as an archer; according to legend an Austrian governor compelled him to shoot an apple from his son's head with his crossbow (which he did successfully without mishap)
{n: Tuberaceae, family Tuberaceae} family of fungi whose ascocarps resemble tubers and vary in size from that of an acorn to that of a large apple
{n: Viscum, genus Viscum} type genus of the Viscaceae: Old World evergreen shrubs parasitic on many trees including oaks but especially apple trees, poplars, aspens and cottonwoods
{n: Waldorf salad} typically made of apples and celery with nuts or raisins and dressed with mayonnaise
{n: Winesap} crisp apple with dark red skin
{n: accessory fruit, pseudocarp} fruit containing much fleshy tissue besides that of the ripened ovary; as apple or strawberry
{n: apple aphid, green apple aphid, Aphis pomi} bright green aphid; feeds on and causes curling of apple leaves
{n: apple blight, apple canker} a disease of apple trees
{n: apple butter} thick dark spicy puree of apples
{n: apple dumpling} apples wrapped in pastry and baked
{n: apple fritter} fritter containing sliced apple
{n: apple geranium, nutmeg geranium, Pelargonium odoratissimum} geranium with round fragrant leaves and small white flowers
{n: apple jelly} jelly made from apple juice
{n: apple juice} the juice of apples
{n: apple maggot, railroad worm, Rhagoletis pomonella} larvae bore into and feed on apples
{n: apple mint, applemint, Mentha rotundifolia, Mentha suaveolens} mint with apple-scented stems of southern and western Europe; naturalized in United States
{n: apple of Peru, shoo fly, Nicandra physaloides} coarse South American herb grown for its blue-and-white flowers followed by a bladderlike fruit enclosing a dry berry
{n: apple of discord} (classical mythology) a golden apple thrown into a banquet of the gods by Eris (goddess of discord--who had not been invited); the apple had `for the fairest' written on it and Hera and Athena and Aphrodite all claimed it; when Paris (prince of Troy) awarded it to Aphrodite it began a chain of events that led to the Trojan War
{n: apple orchard} a grove of apple trees
{n: apple pie} pie (with a top crust) containing sliced apples and sugar
{n: apple polisher, bootlicker, fawner, groveller, groveler, truckler, ass-kisser} someone who humbles himself as a sign of respect; who behaves as if he had no self-respect
{n: apple rust, cedar-apple rust, Gymnosporangium juniperi-virginianae} rust fungus causing rust spots on apples and pears etc
{n: apple tart} a small open pie filled with sliced apples and sugar
{n: apple tart} a tart filled with sliced apples and sugar
{n: apple tree} any tree of the genus Malus especially those bearing firm rounded edible fruits
{n: apple turnover} turnover with an apple filling
{n: apple, orchard apple tree, Malus pumila} native Eurasian tree widely cultivated in many varieties for its firm rounded edible fruits
{n: applecart} a handcart from which apples and other fruit are sold in the street
{n: applesauce, apple sauce} puree of stewed apples usually sweetened and spiced
{n: applewood} wood of any of various apple trees of the genus Malus
{n: apple} fruit with red or yellow or green skin and sweet to tart crisp whitish flesh
{n: balsam apple, Momordica balsamina} a tropical Old World flowering vine with red or orange warty fruit
{n: bell apple, sweet cup, water lemon, yellow granadilla} the edible yellow fruit of the Jamaica honeysuckle
{n: black root rot fungus, Xylaria mali} fungus causing black root rot in apples
{n: brown Betty} baked pudding of apples and breadcrumbs
{n: bullock's heart, Jamaica apple} large heart-shaped tropical fruit with soft acid pulp
{n: candied apple, candy apple, taffy apple, caramel apple, toffee apple} an apple that is covered with a candy-like substance (usually caramelized sugar)
{n: chamomile, camomile, Chamaemelum nobilis, Anthemis nobilis} Eurasian plant apple-scented foliage and white-rayed flowers and feathery leaves used medicinally; in some classification systems placed in genus Anthemis
{n: cherimoya, cherimolla} large tropical fruit with leathery skin and soft pulp; related to custard apples
{n: cider mill} mill that extracts juice from apples to make apple cider
{n: cider, cyder} a beverage made from juice pressed from apples
{n: ciderpress} a press that is used to extract the juice from apples
{n: cloudberry, dwarf mulberry, bakeapple, baked-apple berry, salmonberry, Rubus chamaemorus} creeping raspberry of north temperate regions with yellow or orange berries
{n: codling moth, codlin moth, Carpocapsa pomonella} a small grey moth whose larvae live in apples and English walnuts
{n: collar blight} a disease affecting the trunks of pear and apple trees
{n: common sense, good sense, gumption, horse sense, sense, mother wit} sound practical judgment
"Common sense is not so common"
"he hasn't got the sense God gave little green apples"
"fortunately she had the good sense to run away"
{n: cooking apple} an apple used primarily in cooking for pies and applesauce etc
<-> eating apple
{n: corer} a device for removing the core from apples
{n: crab apple, crabapple, cultivated crab apple} any of numerous varieties of crab apples cultivated for their small acid (usually bright red) fruit used for preserving or as ornamentals for their blossoms
{n: crab apple, crabapple} small sour apple; suitable for preserving
"crabapples make a tangy jelly"
{n: crabapple jelly} a tart apple jelly made from crab apples
{n: crape jasmine, crepe jasmine, crepe gardenia, pinwheel flower, East Indian rosebay, Adam's apple, Nero's crown, coffee rose, Tabernaemontana divaricate} tropical shrub having glossy foliage and fragrant nocturnal flowers with crimped or wavy corollas; northern India to Thailand
{n: custard apple, custard apple tree} any of several tropical American trees bearing fruit with soft edible pulp
{n: custard apple} the fruit of any of several tropical American trees of the genus Annona having soft edible pulp
{n: dowdy, pandowdy} deep-dish apple dessert covered with a rich crust
{n: eater} any green goods that are good to eat
"these apples are good eaters"
{n: eating apple, dessert apple} an apple used primarily for eating raw without cooking
<-> cooking apple
{n: eggplant, aubergine, brinjal, eggplant bush, garden egg, mad apple, Solanum melongena} hairy upright herb native to southeastern Asia but widely cultivated for its large glossy edible fruit commonly used as a vegetable
{n: eggplant, aubergine, mad apple} egg-shaped vegetable having a shiny skin typically dark purple but occasionally white or yellow
{n: fire blight, pear blight} a disease blackening the leaves of pear and apple trees
{n: forbidden fruit} originally an apple from the tree of knowledge of good and evil in the Garden of Eden; it is now used to refer to anything that is tempting but dangerous (as sexuality)
{n: fruitwood} wood of various fruit trees (as apple or cherry or pear) used especially in cabinetwork
{n: hairy root} a phase of crown gall (especially in apples) during which there is abnormal development of fine fibrous roots
{n: ilama} whitish tropical fruit with a pinkish tinge related to custard apples; grown in the southern United States
{n: ivory nut, vegetable ivory, apple nut} nutlike seed of a South American palm; the hard white shell takes a high polish and is used for e.g. buttons
{n: jimsonweed, jimson weed, Jamestown weed, common thorn apple, apple of Peru, Datura stramonium} intensely poisonous tall coarse annual tropical weed having rank-smelling foliage, large white or violet trumpet-shaped flowers and prickly fruits
{n: kai apple} South African fruit smelling and tasting like apricots; used for pickles and preserves
{n: kangaroo apple, poroporo, Solanum aviculare} Australian annual sometimes cultivated for its racemes of purple flowers and edible yellow egg-shaped fruit
{n: kei apple, kei apple bush, Dovyalis caffra} vigorous South African spiny shrub grown for its round yellow juicy edible fruits
{n: maleic acid} a colorless crystalline compound found in unripe fruit (such as apples or tomatoes or cherries) and used mainly to make polyester resins
{n: mamey, mammee, mammee apple} globular or ovoid tropical fruit with thick russet leathery rind and juicy yellow or reddish flesh
{n: mammee apple, mammee, mamey, mammee tree, Mammea americana} tropical American tree having edible fruit with a leathery rind
{n: mandrake, devil's apples, Mandragora officinarum} a plant of southern Europe and North Africa having purple flowers, yellow fruits and a forked root formerly thought to have magical powers
{n: marc} made from residue of grapes or apples after pressing
{n: mayapple, May apple, wild mandrake, Podophyllum peltatum} North American herb with poisonous root stock and edible though insipid fruit
{n: medlar, medlar tree, Mespilus germanica} small deciduous Eurasian tree cultivated for its fruit that resemble crab apples
{n: mincemeat} spiced mixture of chopped raisins and apples and other ingredients with or without meat
{n: oak apple} oak gall caused by larvae of a cynipid wasp
{n: packinghouse} a building where foodstuffs are processed and packed
"they came from an apple packinghouse"
{n: papaw, pawpaw} fruit with yellow flesh; related to custard apples
{n: paring} (usually plural) a part of a fruit or vegetable that is pared or cut off; especially the skin or peel
"she could peel an apple with a single long paring"
{n: pitch apple, strangler fig, Clusia rosea, Clusia major} a common tropical American clusia having solitary white or rose flowers
{n: pome, false fruit} a fleshy fruit (apple or pear or related fruits) having seed chambers and an outer fleshy part
{n: pond apple, pond-apple tree, Annona glabra} small evergreen tree of tropical America with edible fruit; used chiefly as grafting stock
{n: pond apple} ovoid yellow fruit with very fragrant peach-colored flesh; related to custard apples
{n: rose apple, rose-apple tree, jambosa, Eugenia jambos} tropical tree of the East Indies cultivated for its edible fruit
{n: rose apple} fragrant oval yellowish tropical fruit used in jellies and confections
{n: rose chafer, rose bug, Macrodactylus subspinosus} common North American beetle: larvae feed on roots and adults on leaves and flowers of e.g. rose bushes or apple trees or grape vines
{n: sapsucker} small American woodpecker that feeds on sap from e.g. apple and maple trees
{n: service tree, sorb apple, sorb apple tree, Sorbus domestica} medium-sized European tree resembling the rowan but bearing edible fruit
{n: shoestring fungus} any of several fungi of the genus Armillaria that form brown stringy rhizomorphs and cause destructive rot of the roots of some trees such as apples or maples
{n: sorb, sorb apple} acid gritty-textured fruit
{n: soursop, guanabana} large spiny tropical fruit with tart pulp related to custard apples
{n: soursop, prickly custard apple, soursop tree, Annona muricata} small tropical American tree bearing large succulent slightly acid fruit
{n: star apple, caimito, Chrysophyllum cainito} evergreen tree of West Indies and Central America having edible purple fruit star-shaped in cross section and dark green leaves with golden silky undersides
{n: stemmer} a device for removing stems from fruit (as from grapes or apples)
{n: stick} an implement consisting of a length of wood
"he collected dry sticks for a campfire"
"the kid had a candied apple on a stick"
{n: sweet calabash, Passiflora maliformis} West Indian passionflower with edible apple-sized fruit
{n: sweet calabash} apple-sized passion fruit of the West Indies
{n: sweetsop, anon, sugar apple} sweet pulpy tropical fruit with thick scaly rind and shiny black seeds
{n: thorn apple} any of several plants of the genus Datura
{n: thyroid cartilage, Adam's apple} the largest cartilage of the larynx
{n: tomato, love apple, tomato plant, Lycopersicon esculentum} native to South America; widely cultivated in many varieties
{n: wassail} a punch made of sweetened ale or wine heated with spices and roasted apples; especially at Christmas
{n: wild apple, crab apple, crabapple} any of numerous wild apple trees usually with small acid fruit
{n: wild crab, Malus sylvestris} wild crab apple native to Europe; a chief ancestor of cultivated apples
{n: wilding} a wild uncultivated plant (especially a wild apple or crabapple tree)
{n: woolly apple aphid, American blight, Eriosoma lanigerum} primarily a bark feeder on aerial parts and roots of apple and other trees
{v: bear, turn out} bring forth, "The apple tree bore delicious apples this year"
"The unidentified plant bore gorgeous flowers"
{v: check out} record, add up, and receive payment for items purchased
"She was checking out the apples that the customer had put on the conveyer belt"
{v: clean, strip} remove all contents or possession from, or empty completely
"The boys cleaned the sandwich platters"
"The trees were cleaned of apples by the storm"
{v: core} remove the core or center from
"core an apple"
{v: develop, make grow} cause to grow and differentiate in ways conforming to its natural development
"The perfect climate here develops the grain"
"He developed a new kind of apple"
{v: fructify, set} bear fruit
"the apple trees fructify"
{v: mellow} make or grow (more) mellow
"These apples need to mellow a bit more"
"The sun mellowed the fruit"
{v: mime, pantomime} act out without words but with gestures and bodily movements only
"The acting students mimed eating an apple"
{v: quarter} divide into quarters
"quarter an apple"
{v: skin, peel, pare} strip the skin off
"pare apples"
On a bulletin board in his classroom, Shiery has posted a story about Apple II computers, declared officially obsolete last year.
在教室里的一个告示牌上,希尔利贴出了一篇关于苹果第二代计算机的文章,那些机器去年就被正式宣布过时了。
That was a principle that Apple tragically failed to understand when it backed off from licensing its graphic computer interface, assuring that its market share would be savaged by Microsoft's more open Windows operating system. "苹果 "电脑公司悲剧性地未能理解这一原则,它放弃了它的图形电脑界面的销售许可,因为担心自己的市场份额会被微软更开放的视窗操作系统无情地侵占。
Apple Mac Coloured Computers Are on a Roll
麦金托什彩色苹果机好运接连不断
The new model computer from the Apple Macintosh company, and called iMac, not only has advanced computer specifications but the names of fruits.
苹果公司生产的这种新型电脑,称为 iMac ,不仅具有先进的计算机规格而且被赋予了各种水果的名字。
The iMac was made Machine of the Year by TIME Magazine in its January 1999 Digital section, " for bringing Apple back from the brink, sparking a revolution in Internet computing and simply looking great. "
《时代》杂志在 1999年 1月的数字专栏中评选 iMac 为年度风云机器, "因为(它)把苹果公司从崩溃的边缘挽救回来,在因特网计算机领域掀起了一场革命,其外观简直棒极了。 "
In New York at the 1999 Mac World Expo, Steve Jobs, Apple's founder and now acting chief executive, demonstrated the new portable iMac computer.
在纽约举行的 " 1999年 Mac 世界博览会 "上,苹果公司创始人,如今的代理总经理史蒂夫·乔布斯向观众演示了这种新型的便携式 iMac 计算机。
In keeping with the image of the jazzy, snappy computer, the small portable iBook( a reworked version of Apple's portable PowerBook) was billed as " iMac to go ".
这种小型便携式 iBook 作为苹果公司便携式 Power Book 笔记本电脑的改进版本被称为 "移动式 iMac ",与其鲜艳时髦、招人喜爱的形象很相称。
" Customers wanted an iMac to go, " says Apple's acting chief executive Steve Jobs. " There has never been a portable designed for the consumer market. "
苹果公司代理总经理史蒂夫·乔布斯说: "消费者过去就想让 iMac 可以移动,而以前从未有这种为消费者市场设计的便携式机型。 "
Apple is targeting both consumers and schools with the new notebook.
苹果公司的目标就是为消费者及学校提供这种新型笔记本。
I was able to visit the Louvre though, via Apple's Quicktime site. However I struggled for over an hour before I figured out how to get a panoramic view of the various rooms.
虽然后来我通过果公司的 Quicktime 网站访问了卢浮宫,但光是弄明白如何看到各房间的全景画面就让我折腾了一个多小时。
APPLE.COM Visit Kings Canyon National Park in California through their site; experience gorgeous panoramic views of waterfalls, mountains and streams.
APPLE.COM 访问加州的大峡谷国家公园;感受多采多姿的瀑布、高山、溪流。
In a very short while, you 're sure to see development much like that which occurred in the transformation of the Apple II into the Macintosh.
不久之后,你一定会看到好像从苹果二代( Apple II )变成麦金托什( Macintosh )一样的变化。
The product line may have factored into the selection of former Apple executive Rebecca Patton, 43, as CEO.
选择苹果电脑公司的前任管理者丽贝卡·帕顿作首席执行官,业务方面的决策便有了着落。
Apple Extract 苹果提取物
HS0808
Apples, pears and quinces, fresh
鲜的苹果、梨及榅桲
HS08081000
Apples, fresh
鲜苹果
HS08109050
Sugar apple, fresh
鲜番荔枝
HS08109070
Wax apple, fresh
鲜莲雾
HS08133000
Dried apples
苹果干
HS20097100
Apple juice, of a Bris value not exceeding 20
苹果汁,白利糖度值不超过20
HS20097900
Apple juice (incl. must), unfermented, not containing added spirit
其他苹果汁
spsc-10161504
Apple trees
苹果树
spsc-52151634
Domestic apple corer
家用苹果去心器
Q41.1
Congenital absence, atresia and stenosis of jejunum
Apple peel syndrome
Imperforate jejunum
空肠先天缺失、闭锁及狭窄
苹果皮徵候群
无孔空肠 ( 闭锁空肠 )
apple stem grooving virus 苹果凹茎病毒
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