释义 |
aboard adverb present, part of an enterprise US- McDougal led off the tenth. He turned around at the plate and shook hands with the kid. Gil said: “I’m from San Francisco, Commerce High. Glad to have you aboard.” — San Francisco Chronicle, 11 July 1957
- They met for a couple of days in the plush Lake Tahoe layout of Henry Kaiser – deliberately without any party organization officials or other statewide Democratic candidates aboard. — San Francisco Call-Bulletin, p. 13, 15 August 1958
▶ go aboard of someone to act vigorously and aggressively, to attack, or scold vigorously CANADA- I’ll fly aboard o’ye and dance a jig on yer palate! — Nova Scotia Historical Quarterly, p. 273, December 1980: “Why did you say that?”
|