- 最后登录
- 2015-3-20
- 在线时间
- 819 小时
- 寄托币
- 2287
- 声望
- 568
- 注册时间
- 2007-1-28
- 阅读权限
- 175
- 帖子
- 134
- 精华
- 24
- 积分
- 15538
- UID
- 2297267
   
- 声望
- 568
- 寄托币
- 2287
- 注册时间
- 2007-1-28
- 精华
- 24
- 帖子
- 134
|
本帖最后由 lintelle 于 2009-2-19 07:10 编辑
A) deposed
D) proposition
B) impose
ROOT:
pos, pon, posit, post, pound
to place, to set
depose:
–verb (used with object) 1. to remove from office or position, esp. high office: The people deposed the dictator.
2. to testify or affirm under oath, esp. in a written statement: to depose that it was true.
3. Law. to take the deposition of; examine under oath: Two lawyers deposed the witness.
–verb (used without object) 4. to give sworn testimony, esp. in writing.
impose:
–verb (used with object) 1. to lay on or set as something to be borne, endured, obeyed, fulfilled, paid, etc.: to impose taxes.
2. to put or set by or as if by authority: to impose one's personal preference on others.
3. to obtrude or thrust (oneself, one's company, etc.) upon others.
4. to pass or palm off fraudulently or deceptively: He imposed his pretentious books on the public.
5. Printing. to lay (type pages, plates, etc.) in proper order on an imposing stone or the like and secure in a chase for printing.
6. to lay on or inflict, as a penalty.
7. Archaic. to put or place on something, or in a particular place.
8. Obsolete. to lay on (the hands) ceremonially, as in confirmation or ordination.
–verb (used without object) 9. to make an impression on the mind; impose one's or its authority or influence.
10. to obtrude oneself or one's requirements, as upon others: Are you sure my request doesn't impose?
11. to presume, as upon patience or good nature.
—Verb phrase12. impose on or upon, a. to thrust oneself offensively upon others; intrude.
b. to take unfair advantage of; misuse (influence, friendship, etc.).
c. to defraud; cheat; deceive: A study recently showed the shocking number of confidence men that impose on the public.
proposal:
–noun 1. the act of offering or suggesting something for acceptance, adoption, or performance.
2. a plan or scheme proposed.
3. an offer or suggestion of marriage.
proposition:
–noun 1. the act of offering or suggesting something to be considered, accepted, adopted, or done.
2. a plan or scheme proposed.
3. an offer of terms for a transaction, as in business.
4. a thing, matter, or person considered as something to be dealt with or encountered: Keeping diplomatic channels open is a serious proposition.
5. anything stated or affirmed for discussion or illustration.
6. Rhetoric. a statement of the subject of an argument or a discourse, or of the course of action or essential idea to be advocated.
7. Logic. a statement in which something is affirmed or denied, so that it can therefore be significantly characterized as either true or false.
8. Mathematics. a formal statement of either a truth to be demonstrated or an operation to be performed; a theorem or a problem.
9. a proposal of usually illicit sexual relations.
–verb (used with object) 10. to propose sexual relations to.
11. to propose a plan, deal, etc., to.
preposition:
–noun Grammar. any member of a class of words found in many languages that are used before nouns, pronouns, or other substantives to form phrases functioning as modifiers of verbs, nouns, or adjectives, and that typically express a spatial, temporal, or other relationship, as in, on, by, to, since.
|
|