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upstage

英 [ˌʌpˈsteɪdʒ]

美 [ˌʌpˈsteɪdʒ]

adv./adj.  在(或向)舞台后部
v.  抢…的镜头; 把对…的注意吸引过来

过去分词:upstaged 过去式:upstaged 现在分词:upstaging 第三人称单数:upstages 

GRE

Collins.1 / BNC.19146 / COCA.20083

牛津词典

    adv.

      adj.

      • 在(或向)舞台后部
        at or towards the back of the stage in a theatre

        verb

        • 抢…的镜头;把对…的注意吸引过来
          to say or do sth that makes people notice you more than the person that they should be interested in
          1. She was furious at being upstaged by her younger sister.
            她被妹妹抢去风头,感到气愤不已。

        柯林斯词典

        • ADV 在舞台后部;朝舞台后面
          When an actor isupstageor movesupstage, he or she is or moves towards the back part of the stage.
          1. Upstage and right of centre, Robert Morris stands with his back to the audience...
            舞台后方偏右处,罗伯特·莫里斯背对观众站着。
          2. Position a camera upstage...
            在舞台后面安置一部摄影机。
          3. They slowly moved from upstage left into the centre.
            他们慢慢地从舞台后方的左侧移至正中。
          4. Upstageis also an adjective.
          5. ...the large upstage box that Noble used for his 1990 production of King Lear.
            诺布尔在1990制作《李尔王》时使用过的大型舞台背景箱子
        • VERB 使相形见绌;抢…的风头
          If someoneupstagesyou, they draw attention away from you by being more attractive or interesting.
          1. He had a younger brother who always publicly upstaged him...
            他有一个弟弟,总是公然抢他的风头。
          2. He upstages her by flirting with other women.
            他与其他女人调情,故意怠慢她。

        英英释义

        noun

        • the rear part of the stage

          verb

          • steal the show, draw attention to oneself away from someone else
            1. When the dog entered the stage, he upstaged the actress
          • move upstage, forcing the other actors to turn away from the audience
            1. treat snobbishly, put in one's place

              adj

              • remote in manner
                1. stood apart with aloof dignity
                2. a distant smile
                3. he was upstage with strangers
                Synonym:aloofdistant
              • of the back half of a stage
                1. she crossed to the upstage chair forcing the lead to turn his back to the audience

              adv

              • at or toward the rear of the stage
                1. the dancers were directed to move upstage

              双语例句

              • I have no idea what happened there, Swift told Rolling Stone. I think that story was based on the biggest misunderstanding, cause I would never knowingly show up somewhere that I thought I wasnt invited to. And I would never want to upstage anybody.
                斯威夫特告诉《滚石》我认为这件事是基于一个很大的误会,因为我从来不会故意的出现在没有邀请我的地方,而且我从来都不想抢谁的风头。
              • He upstage the other speaker by illustrate his talk with slides.
                他演讲中配上幻灯片,比其他演讲人更吸引听众。
              • Whenever a new system that tried to upstage UNIX came along, somebody would dissect the newcomer and clone its central ideas into UNIX.
                无论什么时候出现一个新的系统想要抢过Unix的风头,总会有人将其剖析,并将它的中心思想克隆到Unix中。
              • He had a younger brother who always publicly upstaged him
                他有一个弟弟,总是公然抢他的风头。
              • Chicago will probably never upstage New York as the hub for America's investment banking talent.
                芝加哥可能永远无法抢纽约的风头,成为美国投资银行业人才的集中地。
              • SPIN STABILIZATION OF SATELLITE-LAUNCHER UPSTAGE Asymptotic analysis of steady reverse smolder
                运载火箭的自旋稳定问题考虑热解反应的阴燃渐近分析
              • In the meantime, make sure your hands do not upstage your ideas.
                在这同时,注意不要使打手势和表达思想本末倒置。
              • Move ( another actor) upstage, forcing him to turn away from the audience.
                抢别的演员的戏,强迫他厌恶观众。
              • This papar presents preliminary assessment about spin stabilization of satellite-launcher upstage and analyses the influence of the interference factors.
                本文讨论卫星运载火箭末级自旋稳定问题,分析了干扰因素的影响。
              • To upstage someone; to destroy the effect of what someone does or says by doing or saying the same thing first.
                赶在某人的前面做或说某件事,从而抢去某人的风头。