2010.07.07.WED 단어
2010.07.07 16:10 Edit
UK: [/rɪd'ʌndənt/]
- 1.redundant
- 2.If you are made redundant, your employer tells you to leave because your job is no longer necessary or because your employer cannot afford to keep paying you.
- 3.Something that is redundant is no longer needed because its job is being done by something else or because its job is no longer necessary or useful.
UK: [/ædv'ɜːʳsɪti/]
- 1.adversity
- 2.Adversity is a very difficult or unfavourable situation
UK: [/ɪks'iːd/]
- 1.exceed
- 2.If something exceeds a particular amount or number, it is greater or larger than that amount or number.
- 3.If you exceed a limit or rule, you go beyond it, even though you are not supposed to or it is against the law.
UK: [/ək'ɒmədeɪt/]
- 1.accommodate
- 2.If a building or space can accommodate someone or something, it has enough room for them.
- 3.To accommodate someone means to provide them with a place to live or stay.
- 4.If something is planned or changed to accommodate a particular situation, it is planned or changed so that it takes this situation into account.
- 5.If you do something to accommodate someone, you do it with the main purpose of pleasing or satisfying them.
- 6.If you accommodate to something new, you change your behaviour or ideas so that you are able to deal with it.
UK: [/bɪj'ɒnd/]
- 1.beyond
- 2.If something is beyond a place or barrier, it is on the other side of it.
- 3.If something happens beyond a particular time or date, it continues after that time or date has passed.
- 4.If something extends beyond a particular thing, it affects or includes other things.
- 5.You use beyond to introduce an exception to what you are saying.
- 6.If something goes beyond a particular point or stage, it progresses or increases so that it passes that point or stage.
- 7.If something is, for example, beyond understanding or beyond belief, it is so extreme in some way that it cannot be understood or believed.
- 8.If you say that something is beyond someone, you mean that they cannot deal with it.
UK: [/trʌŋˈkeɪt/]
- 1.truncate
- 2.to make something shorter, especially by cutting off the top or end
UK: [/dɪr'aɪv/]
- 1.derive
- 2.If you derive something such as pleasure or benefit from a person or from something, you get it from them.
- 3.If you say that something such as a word or feeling derives or is derived from something else, you mean that it comes from that thing.






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