crawl
verbVerb Forms
Idioms Phrasal Verbspresent simple I / you / we / they crawl | |
he / she / it crawls | |
past simple crawled | |
past participle crawled | |
-ing form crawling |
- [intransitive] (+ adv./prep.)
to move forward on your hands and knees or with your body close to the ground 爬;爬行;匍匐行进 Our baby is just starting to crawl. 我们的宝宝刚开始会爬。 A man was crawling away from the burning wreckage. 一个男人正爬离燃烧着的残骸。 She crawled under the fence. 她爬到栅栏下面。
Extra ExamplesAs night fell, we managed to crawl back to our lines. 夜幕降临时,我们设法爬回了我们的防线。 Has the baby started to crawl yet? 宝宝开始会爬了吗? We spent an hour crawling around on our hands and knees looking for the key. 我们趴在地上找了一个小时的钥匙。 She was forced to crawl along through the thickening mist. 她不得不在越来越浓的雾中缓缓行驶。
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadverb- quickly
- slowly
- about
- …
- manage to
- start to
- across
- along
- into
- …
- crawl on (your) hands and knees
- [intransitive] (+ adv./prep.)
when an insect, a spider, etc. crawls, it moves forward on its legs (昆虫)爬行 - [intransitive] (+ adv./prep.)
to move forward very slowly 缓慢行进 Extra ExamplesThe traffic was crawling as I left the city. 当我离开这座城市时,交通拥挤不堪。 The taxi crawled to a halt. 出租车慢慢停了下来。
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadverb- quickly
- slowly
- about
- …
- manage to
- start to
- across
- along
- into
- …
- crawl on (your) hands and knees
- [intransitive] crawl (to somebody) (informal, disapproving)
to be too friendly or helpful to somebody in authority, in a way that is not sincere, especially in order to get an advantage from them 卑躬屈膝;谄媚;巴结;拍马屁
Word OriginMiddle English: of unknown origin; possibly related to Swedish kravla and Danish kravle.
Idioms
come/crawl out of the woodwork
- (informal, disapproving)
if you say that somebody comes/crawls out of the woodwork, you mean that they have suddenly appeared in order to express an opinion or to take advantage of a situation 突然露面;纷纷出笼
make your skin crawl
to make you feel afraid or full of horror 使人毛骨悚然;让人起鸡皮疙瘩 Just the sight of him makes my skin crawl. 一看到他,我就浑身起鸡皮疙瘩。