bloom [ blu:m] n.花;开花,开花期
The party bloomed with joy and good fellowship.
聚会充满了欢乐友好的气氛。
His poetic genius bloomed early and then died away.
他的诗歌才华过早地展现,然后就凋谢了。
The roses in his garden are blooming beautifully these days.
这些天他家花园里的玫瑰花开得正艳。
The plant has a beautiful orange flower, which blooms in May every year.
这种植物有着美丽的橙黄色的花,在每年的五月绽放。
All the wild plants are in bloom.
野生植物正百花盛开。
All roses come into bloom at this time of the year.
所有玫瑰都在每年的这个时间开始绽放。
Judy is now in the bloom of youth.
朱迪现在正当青春年少。
The children are blooming!
孩子们正在健康成长。
The roses are in full bloom.
玫瑰花盛开了。
A happy heart makes a blooming visage.
心花怒放,笑逐颜开。
Marriaage is the bloom or blight of all men's happiness.
结婚是人生的幸福花朵开放的时候,也可能是凋谢的时候。
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
bloom n.花,开花;鲜美;红润
百花齐放 [bǎi huā qí fàng] /(saying) a hundred flowers bloom; let the arts have free expression/
花开 [huā kāi] /bloom/
蓊 [wěng] /a plant in bloom/thick/
{adj: autumn-flowering, autumn-blooming, fall-flowering, fall-blooming, late-flowering, late-blooming} of plants that bloom during the autumn
{adj: bally, blinking, bloody, blooming, crashing, flaming, fucking} (used of persons) informal intensifiers
"what a bally (or blinking) nuisance"
"a bloody fool"
"a crashing bore"
"you flaming idiot"
{adj: black-and-white} lacking hue or shades of grey; part white and part black
"a black-and-white cow"
"black-and-white blooms"
"black-and-white stripes"
{adj: brushlike} resembling a brush
"brushlike blue blooms"
{adj: careless, regardless} (usually followed by `of') without due thought or consideration
"careless of the consequences"
"crushing the blooms with regardless tread"
{adj: exuberant, lush, luxuriant, profuse, riotous} produced or growing in extreme abundance
"their riotous blooming"
{adj: few} a quantifier that can be used with count nouns and is often preceded by `a'; a small but indefinite number
"a few weeks ago"
"a few more wagons than usual"
"an invalid's pleasures are few and far between"
"few roses were still blooming"
"few women have led troops in battle"
<-> many
{adj: flowering} having a flower or bloom
"a flowering plant"
<-> flowerless
{adj: flowerless, nonflowering} without flower or bloom and not producing seeds
"a flowerless plant"
<-> flowering
{adj: full-blown, matured} fully ripe; at the height of bloom
"a full-blown rose"
{adj: overblown} past the stage of full bloom
"overblown roses"
{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: spring-flowering, early-flowering, spring-blooming, early-blooming, late-spring-blooming} of plants that bloom during the spring
{adj: summer-flowering, summer-blooming} of plants that bloom during the summer
{adj: winter-blooming, winter-flowering} of plants that bloom during the winter
{n: American agave, Agave americana} widely cultivated American monocarpic plant with greenish-white flowers on a tall stalk; blooms only after ten to twenty years and then dies
{n: Christmas begonia, blooming-fool begonia, Begonia cheimantha} hybrid winter-blooming begonia grown for its many large pink flowers
{n: Christmas cactus, Schlumbergera buckleyi, Schlumbergera baridgesii} epiphytic cactus of Brazilian ancestry widely cultivated as a houseplant having jointed flat segments and usually rose-purple flowers that bloom in winter
{n: Christmas rose, winter rose, black hellebore, Helleborus niger} European evergreen plant with white or purplish roselike winter-blooming flowers
{n: Colchicum, genus Colchicum} chiefly fall-blooming perennial cormous herbs; sometimes placed in family Colchicaceae
{n: Darwin tulip} any of several very tall, late blooming tulips bearing large squarish flowers on sturdy stems
{n: Easter cactus, Hatiora gaertneri, Schlumbergera gaertneri} spring-blooming South American cactus with oblong joints and coral-red flowers; sometimes placed in genus Schlumbergera
{n: Easter lily, Bermuda lily, white trumpet lily, Lilium longiflorum} tall lily have large white trumpet-shaped flowers that bloom in the spring
{n: Michaelmas daisy, New York aster, Aster novi-belgii} North American perennial herb having small autumn-blooming purple or pink or white flowers; widely naturalized in Europe
{n: Selenicereus, genus Selenicereus} mostly epiphytic climbing cacti that bloom at night
{n: Tulipa gesneriana} tall late blooming tulip
{n: abelmosk, musk mallow, Abelmoschus moschatus, Hibiscus moschatus} bushy herb of tropical Asia grown for its yellow or pink to scarlet blooms that resemble the hibiscus
{n: aster} any of various chiefly fall-blooming herbs of the genus Aster with showy daisylike flowers
{n: biennial} a plant having a life cycle that normally takes two seasons from germination to death to complete; flowering biennials usually bloom and fruit in the second season
{n: bloom, bloom of youth, salad days} the best time of youth
{n: bloom, blush, flush, rosiness} a rosy color (especially in the cheeks) taken as a sign of good health
{n: bloomer} a flower that blooms in a particular way
"a night bloomer"
{n: blooming, bloom} the organic process of bearing flowers
"you will stop all bloom if you let the flowers go to seed"
{n: common ageratum, Ageratum houstonianum} small tender herb grown for its fluffy brushlike blue to lavender blooms
{n: cosmos, cosmea} any of various mostly Mexican herbs of the genus Cosmos having radiate heads of variously colored flowers and pinnate leaves; popular fall-blooming annuals
{n: cryptomonad, cryptophyte} common in fresh and salt water appearing along the shore as algal blooms
{n: day lily, daylily} any of numerous perennials having tuberous roots and long narrow bladelike leaves and usually yellow lilylike flowers that bloom for only a day
{n: desert four o'clock, Colorado four o'clock, maravilla, Mirabilis multiflora} wildflower having vibrant deep pink tubular evening-blooming flowers; found in sandy and desert areas from southern California to southern Colorado and into Mexico
{n: dhak, dak, palas, Butea frondosa, Butea monosperma} East Indian tree bearing a profusion of intense vermilion velvet-textured blooms and yielding a yellow dye
{n: dwarf tulip, Tulipa armena, Tulipa suaveolens} small early blooming tulip
{n: early spider orchid, Ophrys sphegodes} spring-blooming spider orchid having a flower with yellow or green or pink sepals and a broad brown velvety lip
{n: efflorescence, bloom} a powdery deposit on a surface
{n: erythrite, cobalt bloom} a reddish mineral consisting of hydrated cobalt arsenate in monoclinic crystalline form and used in coloring glass; usually found in veins bearing cobalt and arsenic
{n: fall dandelion, arnica bud, Leontodon autumnalis} fall-blooming European herb with a yellow flower; naturalized in the United States
{n: fall-blooming hydrangea, Hydrangea paniculata} deciduous shrub or small tree with pyramidal flower clusters
{n: flower, bloom, blossom} reproductive organ of angiosperm plants especially one having showy or colorful parts
{n: flower, prime, peak, heyday, bloom, blossom, efflorescence, flush} the period of greatest prosperity or productivity
{n: flower} a plant cultivated for its blooms or blossoms
{n: foamflower, coolwart, false miterwort, false mitrewort, Tiarella cordifolia} stoloniferous white-flowered spring-blooming woodland plant
{n: forsythia} any of various early blooming oleaceous shrubs of the genus Forsythia; native to eastern Asia and southern Europe but widely cultivated for their branches of bright yellow bell-shaped flowers
{n: genus Bergenia} genus of perennial spring-blooming rhizomatous herbs with thick evergreen leaves; eastern Asia
{n: goldenrod} any of numerous chiefly summer-blooming and fall-blooming North American plants especially of the genus Solidago
{n: high-bush blueberry, tall bilberry, swamp blueberry, Vaccinium corymbosum} high-growing deciduous shrub of eastern North America bearing edible blueish to blackish berries with a distinct bloom; source of most cultivated blueberries
{n: magnolia} any shrub or tree of the genus Magnolia; valued for their longevity and exquisite fragrant blooms
{n: night-blooming cereus} any of several cacti of the genus Cereus
{n: night-blooming cereus} any of several cacti of the genus Hylocereus
{n: night-blooming cereus} any of several night-blooming cacti of the genus Selenicereus
{n: paper white, Narcissus papyraceus} a daffodil having star-shaped white blossoms; often grown indoors to bloom in the winter
{n: queen of the night, Selenicereus grandiflorus} tropical American climbing cactus having triangular branches; often cultivated for its large showy night-blooming flowers followed by yellow red-streaked fruits
{n: rattail cactus, rat's-tail cactus, Aporocactus flagelliformis} commonly cultivated tropical American cactus having slender creeping stems and very large showy crimson flowers that bloom for several days
{n: rosebay, Rhododendron maxima} late-spring-blooming rhododendron of eastern North America having rosy to pink-purple flowers
{n: salt tree, Halimodendron halodendron, Halimodendron argenteum} spiny shrub of the Caspian salt plains and Siberia having elegant silvery, downy young foliage and mildly fragrant pink-purple blooms
{n: spirea, spiraea, Astilbe japonica} a Japanese shrub that resembles members of the genus Spiraea; widely cultivated in many varieties for its dense panicles of flowers in many colors; often forced by florists for Easter blooming
{n: star magnolia, Magnolia stellata} deciduous shrubby magnolia from Japan having fragrant white starlike flowers blooming before leaves unfold; grown as an ornamental in United States
{n: sweet sand verbena, Abronia fragrans} taller than Abronia elliptica and having night-blooming flowers
{n: trailing four o'clock, trailing windmills, Allionia incarnata} trailing plant having crowded clusters of 3 brilliant deep pink flowers resembling a single flower blooming near the ground; found in dry gravelly or sandy soil; southwestern United States and Mexico
{n: umbrella plant, Eriogonum allenii} late blooming perennial plant of shale barrens of Virginia having flowers in flat-topped clusters
{n: winged everlasting, Ammobium alatum} Australian plant widely cultivated for its beautiful silvery-white blooms with bright yellow centers on long winged stems
{n: winter heath, spring heath, Erica carnea} dwarf European shrub with very early blooming bell-shaped red flowers
{n: winter jasmine, Jasminum nudiflorum} deciduous rambling shrub widely cultivated for its winter-blooming yellow flowers
{v: bloom, blossom, flower} produce or yield flowers
"The cherry tree bloomed"
{v: fade, wither} lose freshness, vigor, or vitality
"Her bloom was fading"
One lone azalea blooming brilliant red against the gray.
一株孤独的杜鹃花在灰色天空的衬托下怒呈着它那艳丽的红。
Zellweger blooms in this context.
泽尔韦格因此在片中焕发出了光彩。
By this reasoning, freedom equals the parts of our nature not determined by our genes, a sort of flower that blooms after our genes have done their tyrannical worst.
按照这样的逻辑,自由就等于我们的天性中不由基因决定的那些部分,是在我们的基因尽专横跋扈之能事之后绽放的花朵。
Chiang Mai, Thailand's Northern Rose, is in full bloom.
清迈是泰国北方的玫瑰,目前正是这朵玫瑰盛开的时节。
Grazing was believed to have some effect on algal numbers, especially after phytoplankton growth rates declined at the end of bloom periods, but grazing was considered a minor component of models that predicted algal population dynamics.
食草动物的吞食据信会对水藻数量产生一定的影响,尤其是于开花期末期在浮游植物的生长率下降之后;但在那些预测水藻种群动态的模型中,食草动物的吞食视被作一个次要的组成部分。
藻花 Algal bloom
HS72249010
Blooms/pieces roughly shapd by forgng,>=10 t, alloy stl o/t stainls
单件重量在10吨及以上的粗铸锻件坯
blooming 敷霜,表面加膜
bloom 水华
凝胶 Gelatin 250 bloom and above (BORVINE)
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