momentum
noun /məˈmentəm/
/məʊˈmentəm/
[uncountable]推进力;动力;势头 - The fight for his release gathers momentum each day.
争取使他获释的斗争声势日益加强。 - They began to lose momentum in the second half of the game.
在比赛的下半场,他们的势头就逐渐减弱。
- She gave fresh momentum to the campaign.
她为这一运动注入了新的活力。 - The campaign for change now has considerable momentum.
改革运动现在势头相当猛。 - The team has lost momentum in recent weeks.
最近几周球队的强劲势头已经减弱。 - Their momentum has gone, and they feel they cannot fight any longer.
他们已经没了冲劲,感到无法继续打下去了。 - There is plenty of political momentum behind the proposed changes.
在变革提议背后有足够的政治驱动力。 - There's no forward momentum in the movie.
这部影片中找不到前进的动力。 - We have to keep the momentum of our sales operation going.
我们必须保持销售业务的发展势头。 - We must keep up the momentum for reform.
我们必须保持住改革的冲劲。 - keeping up the momentum for growth
保持增长势头 - the irresistible momentum towards reunification of the two countries
两国统一的不可抗拒的势头 - The momentum of this success carried the party to victory in the elections.
这一成功的势头使该党在选举中获胜。 - The programme developed a momentum of its own.
该方案形成了自己的势头。 - There was an unstoppable momentum towards German reunification.
德国的重新统一势不可挡。 - This deal adds fresh momentum to plans for a new rail link.
这项交易为新铁路线的规划注入了新的动力。
Collocations Dictionaryadjective- considerable
- great
- tremendous
- …
- have
- build up
- gain
- …
- build up
- increase
- carry somebody/something
- …
- momentum for
- momentum towards/toward
- keep the momentum going
- The fight for his release gathers momentum each day.
冲力 - The vehicle gained momentum as the road dipped.
那辆车顺着坡越跑冲力越大。 - The car gathered momentum as it rolled down the hill.
汽车冲下山时动量逐渐增加。
Collocations Dictionaryadjective- considerable
- great
- tremendous
- …
- have
- build up
- gain
- …
- build up
- increase
- carry somebody/something
- …
- momentum for
- momentum towards/toward
- keep the momentum going
- The vehicle gained momentum as the road dipped.
- (specialist) the quantity of movement of a moving object, measured as its mass multiplied by its speed
Topics Physics and chemistryc2动量
词源late 17th cent.: from Latin, from movimentum, from movere ‘to move’.