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slot

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slot

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English 5++朗文当代英语 5++LDOCE 5++朗文 5++slot1 /slɒt $ slɑːt/ ●●● S3 noun [countable]  1 HOLEa long narrow hole in a surface, that you can put something into 〔可放进东西的〕狭孔,狭缝 Alan dropped another quarter into the slot on the pay phone. 艾伦往付费电话的投币口里又塞了一枚 25 分的硬币。see thesaurus at hole5 see picture at 见图 hole12 PERIOD OF TIMEa short period of time allowed for one particular event on a programme or timetable 〔节目或时间表里的〕一段时间 a ten-minute slot on the breakfast show 早餐节目中的一个十分钟栏目 landing slots at Heathrow Airport 希思罗机场的降落时间表 A new comedy is scheduled for the 9 pm time slot. 晚上9点档排了一部新的喜剧片。
Examples from the Corpus
slotHe found just the right person for his newly created slot of research associate.It is very important to have the greatest possible support around the expansion slot area.About 180 of them competed for slots in five school bands this year.Ron's show has been moved from its 9 p.m. slot on WKDH.The message was placed in every employee's mail slot.a parking slotGaming areas were half-empty, but gamblers made a beeline for the slots and tables at halftime.I dropped a quarter in the slot and dialed the number.Next wind some tape through the slots and around the core to provide a base for the pickup windings.The disk goes into this slot here.Please try again later when there is a free user slot available.time slotIf this is a family show, give it a family time slot.Its weekly feature show, Inside Stuff, is a dunk-fest programmed into a youth-oriented time slot on Saturday morning.Press downplayed the series' time slot, saying that other series have not done well when put between two highly-rated shows.The programs have appeared periodically, in no set time slot.Time Division Multiple Access converts conversations into digital signals and assigns each one specific time slots.Titles, stars, time slots, producers and who knows what else will change by the time September rolls around.Have you secretly been lusting after their time slot?
slot2 verb (slotted, slotting) [intransitive, transitive always + adverb/preposition]  1PUTto go into a slot, or to put something in a slot (把)插进窄孔[狭缝]slot something into something5 Mary slotted a cassette into the VCR.玛丽把盒式磁带插进录像机里。n Mary slotted the key into the lock.slot into Each length of board slots easily into the next. 每块木板之间都能轻松接合。 All the wood parts come pre-cut so that they can be slotted together (=put together using slots). 所有的木部件都预先切割好,可以拼装起来。2slot in phrasal verb British English informal ARRANGE A MEETING, EVENT ETCto fit something or someone into a plan, organization etc, or to fit in 安排,安置;适应 Stewart has slotted in well. 斯图尔特已经很适应了。slot somebody/something ↔ in We should be able to slot the meeting in before lunch. 我们应该可以把会议安排在午饭之前。→ See Verb table
Examples from the Corpus
slotChildren are slotted at national norms, above those norms, or else beneath them.Brownie albums were provided, with spaces ready prepared for slotting in a sequence of the snapshots.These ready-to-use units can be slotted in wherever and whenever they fit.Then, he felt the world shift on its axis, and knew that a new reality had slotted into its place.The final pieces of the puzzle had now been slotted into place.He took one at random, went into the master bedroom and slotted it into the video.
From Longman Business Dictionaryslotslot /slɒtslɑːt/ noun [countable]1a short period of time allowed for one particular event in a series of other similar eventsAt one time, the airline held 38% of the available take-off and landing slots at Heathrow Airport.There’s a repeat of the daytime show in thelate-night slot.2American EnglishJOB a particular job in an organizationThe board elected a new director to fill one of the slots.4,000 slots, mostly white-collar, could be eliminated from the company’s Missouri plant alone. see also expansion slotOrigin slot1 (1300-1400) Old French esclot hollow place in the bone in the middle of the chest
slot1 nounslot2 verbLDOCE OnlineChinese
Business Corpus hole surface, a long you a narrow that in


slot
I
slot1 /slɒt $ slɑːt/ noun [countable]
 Date: 1300-1400
 Language: Old French
 Origin: esclot 'hollow place in the bone in the middle of the chest'
1. a long narrow hole in a surface, that you can put something into:
    Alan dropped another quarter into the slot on the pay phone.
2. a short period of time allowed for one particular event on a programme or timetable:
    a ten-minute slot on the breakfast show
    landing slots at Heathrow Airport
    A new comedy is scheduled for the 9 pm time slot.
     
THESAURUS
    hole an empty space in the surface of something, which sometimes goes all the way through it: A fox had dug a hole under our fence. | Rain was coming in through a hole in the roof.
    space an empty area between two things, into which you can put something: Are there any empty spaces on the bookshelf? | a parking space
    gap an empty area between two things or two parts of something, especially one that should not be there: He has a gap between his two front teeth. | I squeezed through a gap in the hedge.
    opening a hole that something can pass through or that you can see through, especially at the entrance of something: The train disappeared into the dark opening of the tunnel. | I looked through the narrow opening in the wall.
    leak a small hole where something has been damaged or broken that lets liquid or gas flow in or out: a leak in the pipe | The plumber's coming to repair the leak.
    puncture especially British English a small hole in a tyre through which air escapes: My bike's got a puncture.
    crack a very narrow space between two things or two parts of something: The snake slid into a crack in the rock. | She was peering through the crack in the curtains.
    slot a straight narrow hole that you put a particular type of object into: You have to put a coin in the slot before you dial the number. | A small disk fits into a slot in the camera.
    crater a round hole in the ground made by an explosion or by a large object hitting it hard: a volcanic crater | The meteor left a crater over five miles wide. | the craters on the moon

II
slot2 verb (past tense and past participle slotted, present participle slotting) [intransitive, transitive always + adverb/preposition]
to go into a slot, or to put something in a slot
    slot something into something
    Mary slotted a cassette into the VCR.
    slot into
    Each length of board slots easily into the next.
    All the wood parts come pre-cut so that they can be slotted together (=put together using slots).
     
slot in phrasal verb British English informal
  to fit something or someone into a plan, organization etc, or to fit in:
    Stewart has slotted in well.
    slot somebody/something ↔ in
    We should be able to slot the meeting in before lunch.


slotBrE /slɒt/ 🔊NAmE /slɑːt/ 🔊 nouna long narrow opening, into which you put or fit sth (投放或插入东西的)窄缝,扁口to put some coins in the slot往投币口中塞几个硬币a position, a time or an opportunity for sb/sth, for example in a list, a programme of events or a series of broadcasts (名单、日程安排或广播节目表中的)位置,时间,机会He has a regular slot on the late-night programme. 他在深夜节目中有一档固定栏目。🔊🔊Their album has occupied the Number One slot for the past six weeks. 他们的唱片在最近六周占据排行榜首位。🔊🔊the airport's take-off and landing slots机场的起飞降落时间表
slotBrE /slɒt/ 🔊NAmE /slɑːt/ 🔊 verbpresent simple - I / you / we / they slot BrE /slɒt/ 🔊 NAmE /slɑːt/ 🔊present simple - he / she / it slots BrE /slɒts/ 🔊 NAmE /slɑːts/ 🔊past simple slotted BrE /ˈslɒtɪd/ 🔊 NAmE /ˈslɑːtɪd/ 🔊past participle slotted BrE /ˈslɒtɪd/ 🔊 NAmE /ˈslɑːtɪd/ 🔊 -ing form slotting BrE /ˈslɒtɪŋ/ 🔊 NAmE /ˈslɑːtɪŋ/ 🔊 [transitive, intransitive] to put sth into a space that is available or designed for it; to fit into such a space 投放;插入;(被)塞进;(被)装入~ sth + adv./prep. He slotted a disk into the drive.他把光盘放入驱动器中。The bed comes in sections which can be quickly slotted together. 这种床以散件套装出售,可以快速组装起来。🔊🔊+ adv./prep. The dishwasher slots neatly between the cupboards. 洗碗机刚好可以放在两个碗橱之间。🔊🔊fall/slot into ˈplaceif sth complicated or difficult to understand falls or slots into place, it becomes organized or clear in your mind 明朗化;清晰;理出头绪 ˌslot sb/sth↔ˈinto manage to find a position, a time or an opportunity for sb/sth 为…安排时间(或提供机会);安置I can slot you in between 3 and 4. 我可以把你插到第 3 和第 4 之间。🔊🔊We slotted in some extra lessons before the exam. 我们在考试前加了几节课。🔊🔊