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detour

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detour

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English 5++朗文当代英语 5++LDOCE 5++朗文 5++de·tour1 /ˈdiːtʊə $ -tʊr/ noun [countable]  1 WAY/ROUTEAVOIDa way of going from one place to another that is longer than the usual way 绕行,迂回make/take a detour We took a detour to avoid the town centre. 我们绕道避开镇中心。2. American English a different road for traffic when the usual road cannot be used 绕行路,支路 SYN British English diversion
Examples from the Corpus
detourMoving from consultant to implementer is a detour you should be aware of.People with baby buggies have to walk in the roadway and residents, I think, have to make a detour.Motorists wend their way through orange traffic cones and detour signs.On our walk back to the ferry dock that afternoon we make one last detour to the beach.This is the how-to, practical guide that will help you avoid opportunistic detours and stay on track.She could make just a small detour ... She had a decent map, didn't she?To justify such an approach it is necessary to take a theoretical detour.Furthermore, I often took detours to avoid sand which the Land Rover had gone through using its four wheel drive.make/take a detourBut then-even before he opened his doors-he took a detour.He made a detour to see it.In any case all Euro-roads still lead to Rome, though they now take a detour through Mosae Trajectum.Furthermore, I often took detours to avoid sand which the Land Rover had gone through using its four wheel drive.Most fail when they take a detour into areas they know nothing about.Attempting to make a detour, the car got bogged down in a salt lake and was abandoned.People with baby buggies have to walk in the roadway and residents, I think, have to make a detour.We used to make a detour going down Lenin Avenue.We took a detour to avoid the street repairs.
detour2 verb [intransitive, transitive] American English  WAY/ROUTEAVOIDto make a detour (使)绕道,绕行→ See Verb table
Examples from the Corpus
detourWhen the actual construction began, I detoured daily on my way to school to check out the progress being made.Northbound traffic was being detoured from I-5 to Highway 33 northbound to 140 westbound and back to I-5.Pacino detours his motorcade to visit the grieving parents.But the movie tells the wrong story, getting detoured into a murder investigation whose solution is far too obvious.Mitchell trudged down the hall toward his corner office, detouring into the washroom to assess the damage to his hair.Later in the morning Fakhrti detoured over back roads to his house.Before the opening of this new marina, yachts had to detour to the south to the Canaries.On that same day, Franco ordered Varela to detour to Toledo.
Origin detour1 (1700-1800) French détour
de·tour1 noundetour2 verbChineseSyllable
from is way of going one that to a Corpus another place


detour
I
detour1 /ˈdiːtʊə $ -tʊr/ noun [countable]
 Date: 1700-1800
 Language: French
 Origin: détour
1. a way of going from one place to another that is longer than the usual way
    make/take a detour
    We took a detour to avoid the town centre.
2. American English a different road for traffic when the usual road cannot be used
   SYN  diversion British English

II
detour2 verb [intransitive and transitive] American English
to make a detour


de·tourBrE /ˈdiːtʊə(r)/ 🔊NAmE /ˈdiːtʊr/ 🔊 nouna longer route that you take in order to avoid a problem or to visit a place 绕行的路;迂回路;兜圈子We had to make a detour around the flooded fields. 我们只得绕道避开被洪水淹没的田野。🔊🔊It's well worth making a detour to see the village. 绕道去参观一下这村子很是值得。🔊🔊(NAmE) (BrE di·ver·sion) a road or route that is used when the usual one is closed 临时绕行路;临时支路
de·tourBrE /ˈdiːtʊə(r)/ 🔊NAmE /ˈdiːtʊr/ 🔊 verbpresent simple - I / you / we / they detour BrE /ˈdiːtʊə(r)/ 🔊 NAmE /ˈdiːtʊr/ 🔊present simple - he / she / it detours BrE /ˈdiːtʊəz/ 🔊 NAmE /ˈdiːtʊrz/ 🔊past simple detoured BrE /ˈdiːtʊəd/ 🔊 NAmE /ˈdiːtʊrd/ 🔊past participle detoured BrE /ˈdiːtʊəd/ 🔊 NAmE /ˈdiːtʊrd/ 🔊 -ing form detouring BrE /ˈdiːtʊərɪŋ/ 🔊 NAmE /ˈdiːtʊrɪŋ/ 🔊 [intransitive, transitive] (NAmE) ~ (sb/sth) (to…) to take a longer route in order to avoid a problem or to visit a place; to make sb/sth take a longer route (使)绕道,绕行The President detoured to Chicago for a special meeting. 总统绕道到芝加哥参加一个特别会议。🔊🔊