straddle
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English 5++LDOCE 5++strad·dle /ˈstrædl/ verb [transitive] 1 SITto sit or stand with your legs on either side of someone or something 跨坐;跨立 The photo shows him dressed in leather, straddling a motorbike. 照片上他身穿皮衣,跨坐在摩托车上。2 ON/ON TOP OFif something straddles a line, road, or river, part of it is on one side and part on the other side 横跨…的两边,跨越…的两边straddle something between something Mount Elgon straddles the border between Kenya and Uganda. 埃尔贡火山横跨肯尼亚和乌干达两国的边境。3 INCLUDEto include different areas of activity, groups, time etc 包括,跨越〔不同的活动领域、团体、时间等〕 Her research straddles mathematics and social sciences. 她的研究跨越数学和社会科学两个领域。 immigrants straddling two cultures 跨越两种文化的移民→ See Verb table
Examples from the Corpus
straddle• When you straddle a thing it takes a long time to explain it.• The worker must straddle and stretch across the distances, often very large distances.• Billy pushed his chair away from the table, straddling it, ready to move.• Her job straddled marketing and public relations.• I looked up to see her straddling one of the huge branches of the oak tree.• They cobbled together their economic theories, then, while straddling the secular and the sacred.• He sat facing her, straddling the small wooden chair.• The effect was heightened by the pavilions which straddled the track behind the main building.• As a general argument it straddles the two others, being more limited than either but broader than each.• The forest straddles the U.S.- Mexico border.• Riders straddled their mountain bikes waiting for the race to begin.From Longman Business Dictionarystraddlestrad‧dle /ˈstrædl/ noun [countable]FINANCE1a combination of CALL OPTIONs (=rights to buy particular shares at a fixed price within a certain period of time) and PUT OPTIONs (=rights to sell particular shares at a fixed price within a certain period of time) relating to the same shares and with the same EXERCISE PRICE. The holder of a straddle makes a profit if the share price goes up or down by a large amount during the life of the optionsOne investor bought 400 lots of the November 425p puts and calls at 50p each to set up a straddle which would be profitable if the underlying shares move out of a small trading range.2a situation where someone buys FINANCIAL FUTUREs or COMMODITIES FUTURES with different delivery datesStraddle investments, where an investor reduces risk by buying a contract of one month and selling the contract of another, are popular with producers and consumers of commodities.Origin straddle (1500-1600) stridestrad·dle verbChineseSyllable
or of Corpus stand to your side sit either with on Business legs
straddle
strad‧dle /ˈstrædl/
verb [transitive]
The photo shows him dressed in leather, straddling a motorbike.
2. if something straddles a line, road, or river, part of it is on one side and part on the other side
straddle something between something
Mount Elgon straddles the border between Kenya and Uganda.
3. to include different areas of activity, groups, time etc:
Her research straddles mathematics and social sciences.
immigrants straddling two cultures
strad‧dle /ˈstrædl/
verb [transitive] Date: 1500-1600
Origin: stride
1. to sit or stand with your legs on either side of someone or something:Origin: stride
2. if something straddles a line, road, or river, part of it is on one side and part on the other side
straddle something between something
3. to include different areas of activity, groups, time etc: