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overburden    音標拼音: ['ovɚb'ɚdən]
vt. 裝載過多,負擔過多,使過勞

裝載過多,負擔過多,使過勞

overburden
n 1: the surface soil that must be moved away to get at coal
seams and mineral deposits
2: an excessive burden [synonym: {overload}, {overburden}]
v 1: burden with too much work or responsibility
2: load with excessive weight

Overburden \O`ver*bur"den\, v. t.
To load with too great weight or too much care, etc. --Sir P.
Sidney.
[1913 Webster]


Overburden \O"ver*bur`den\, n.
The waste which overlies good stone in a quarry. --Raymond.
[1913 Webster]

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英文字典中文字典相關資料:
  • technical - Due by, due on, due for - whats the difference? - English . . .
    "The sales report is due by 12pm on Friday " The day something is due follows the time, which is given more importance The time can be stripped and the sentence will still work, one just loses the precision of the request "Due on" places more importance on the day something is due, and not so much the time "Your membership fee is due on
  • What is the proper usage of the phrase due diligence?
    The phrase "due diligence" appears to imply that a certain level of diligence is "due" from the party "doing" the diligence to a second party Whenever I encounter this term, it make me cringe, because the people using it [I review commercial appraisals] seem to be unable to speak of diligence without attaching a "due" in front
  • Meaning of by when used with dates - inclusive or exclusive
    Without additional information, 'due by MM-DD-YYYY' has a fair chance of meaning: Due at or before 11:59:59 PM on that date - that is, before the specified day ends Due at or before 11:59:59 PM on the previous date - that is, before the specified day begins
  • Meaning of Ill make due - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    due noun : something due or owed: such as - something that rightfully belongs to one give him his due or a payment or obligation required by law or custom : DEBT In this context to "make do" would have a different meaning that "make due" One would imply doing more with less and the other would imply doing enough to cover what is owed
  • meaning - Do owed and due mean the opposite? - English Language . . .
    Owed and due are closely related Owed, without more explanation, means the total amount of debt obligated to be paid by A to B Due means the amount of debt that is expected to be paid by a given date (a due date) from A to B At times they are the same, at times due is a subset of owed This assumes that the person owing is also the person
  • Past due or passed due - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Once the bill was due, now it is "past due" This seems much more reasonable You could make a better argument still in terms of past the preposition meaning "beyond in time or space", since it is beyond due Both the adjective and preposition sense allow us to say that "the bill is past due"
  • What is the difference between owing to and due to?
    So "due to" is a preposition meaning "because of," and "owing to" is a preposition meaning "because of"—not much basis for distinction there It follows that, in modern usage, embracing "owing to" while rejecting "due to" has no rational basis If the justification doesn't lie in historical idiomatic preference, it doesn't lie anywhere
  • grammaticality - Is make due now considered acceptable? - English . . .
    due noun : something due or owed: such as - something that rightfully belongs to one give him his due or a payment or obligation required by law or custom : DEBT In this context to "make do" would have a different meaning that "make due" One would imply doing more with less and the other would imply doing enough to cover what is owed
  • meaning - Using due to in a sentence - English Language Usage Stack . . .
    The improvement in your English is due to me The improvement in your English is caused by me The Chicago Manual of Style says that we use “due to” in place of “attributable to,” but not if it can be replaced with “because of ” The improvement in your English is attributable to me (Yes) The improvement in your English is due to me
  • grammaticality - As or due to give same meaning? - English Language . . .
    Due to is also correct (if the clause is rewritten to be a phrasal noun), but it always sounds like jargon if the explanation is more than a few words So, Good: The store was closed due to rain Bad: Due to the availability of reference data with a leading company and difficulty of blah blah blah blah blah





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