fare
柯林斯詞典
1. N-COUNT A fare is the money that you pay for a trip that you make, for example, in a bus, train, or taxi. 車費
He could barely afford the fare. 他幾乎付不起車費。
2. V-I If you say that someone or something fares well or badly, you are referring to the degree of success they achieve in a particular situation or activity. 進(jìn)展
It is unlikely that the marine industry will fare any better in September. 海運業(yè)不大可能在9月份有所好轉(zhuǎn)。
返回 fare
fare /f??/ (faring,fared,fares)
劍橋詞典
- Take some foreign currency to cover incidentals like the taxi fare to your hotel .
- Train fare increases of five percent are envisaged for the next year .
- Please tender the exact fare.
- Government sources estimate a long-term 50 percent increase in rail fares.
- The airline's decision to cut air fares is likely to unsettle the market .
fare noun (PAYMENT)
[ 可數(shù)名詞:有復(fù)數(shù)形式的名詞 ]the money that you pay for a journey in a vehicle such as a bus or train
車費;車票價
Train fares are going up again. 火車票又漲價了。
[ 可數(shù)名詞:有復(fù)數(shù)形式的名詞 ]
someone who pays to be driven somewhere in a taxi
出租車乘客
例句
fare noun (FOOD)
[ 不可數(shù)或單數(shù)名詞:沒有復(fù)數(shù)形式的名詞 ] old-fashionedthe type of food that is served in a restaurant
(餐館的)飯菜 返回 fare