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apron

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apron

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English 5++朗文当代英语 5++LDOCE 5++朗文 5++
Related topics: Air, Theatre
a·pron /ˈeɪprən/ ●●○ noun [countable]  1. DFCa piece of clothing that covers the front part of your clothes and is tied around your waist, worn to keep your clothes clean, especially while cooking 围裙2 apron strings informalCONTROL the relationship between a child and its mother, especially if the mother controls an adult son or daughter too much 母亲的控制 You’re 25 years old, and you still haven’t cut the apron strings. 你都25岁了,还没摆脱母亲的支配。 Jeff is still tied to his mother’s apron strings. 杰夫还是处处听母亲的。3. TTA technical the hard surface in an airport on which planes are turned around, loaded, unloaded etc 停机坪4. technical (also apron stage)APT the part of the stage in a theatre that is in front of the curtain 台口〔舞台幕前部分〕
Examples from the Corpus
apronHe'd had time to wash his hands and take off his rubber gloves and apron.It's as if somebody put June Cleaver's pearl necklace and apron on Madonna.Sarah finished the washing-up and, taking off her apron, folded it and placed it in one of the table drawers.She took off her apron and went upstairs from the basement to suggest the extravagance to Irena.Our dive bombers found numerous carrier-type aircraft lined up on the apron of the field and quickly set them ablaze.One of the cooks came in, judging by the white apron.
Origin apron (1500-1600) a napron, mistaken for an apron; napron ((14-16 centuries)) from Old French naperon, from nape cloth
a·pron nounChineseSyllable
of of Corpus clothing piece that front a covers part the


apron
apron /ˈeɪprən/ noun [countable]
 Date: 1500-1600
 Origin: a napron, mistaken for an apron; napron (14-16 centuries) from Old French naperon, from nape 'cloth'
1. a piece of clothing that covers the front part of your clothes and is tied around your waist, worn to keep your clothes clean, especially while cooking
2. apron strings informal the relationship between a child and its mother, especially if the mother controls an adult son or daughter too much:
    You’re 25 years old, and you still haven’t cut the apron strings.
    Jeff is still tied to his mother’s apron strings.
3. technical the hard surface in an airport on which planes are turned around, loaded, unloaded etc
4. technical (also apron stage) the part of the stage in a theatre that is in front of the curtain


ap·ronBrE /ˈeɪprən/ 🔊NAmE /ˈeɪprən/ 🔊 nouna piece of clothing worn over the front of the body, from the chest or the waist down, and tied around the waist. Aprons are worn over other clothes to keep them clean, for example when cooking. 围裙   compare pinafore (2) (specialist) an area with a hard surface at an airport, where aircraft are turned around, loaded, etc. (机场的)停机坪 (also ˈapron stage) (specialist) (in a theatre 剧院) the part of the stage that is in front of the curtain 台唇(舞台幕前的部分)(tied to) sb's apron strings(too much under) the influence and control of sb (过分受)某人的影响(或控制)The British prime minister is too apt to cling to Washington's apron strings. 英国首相对华府过于唯命是从。🔊🔊