blitzing

英 [ˈblɪtsɪŋ] 美 [ˈblɪtsɪŋ]

v.  用闪电战空袭(或毁坏)
blitz的现在分词



柯林斯词典

  1. VERB 以闪电战空袭;以闪电战攻击
    If a city or building is blitzed during a war, it is attacked by bombs dropped by enemy aircraft.
    1. In the autumn of 1940 London was blitzed by an average of two hundred aircraft a night...
      1940年秋,伦敦平均每晚遭到200架飞机的空袭。
    2. They blitzed the capital with tanks, artillery, anti-aircraft weapons and machine guns.
      他们动用坦克、大炮、防空武器和机关枪奇袭了首都。
  2. 德军对英国城市的空袭,伦敦大轰炸(1940年至1941年间)
    The heavy bombing of British cities by German aircraft in 1940 and 1941 is referred to as the Blitz.
    1. N-COUNT 努力;下工夫
      If you have a blitz on something, you make a big effort to deal with it or to improve it.
      1. Regional accents are still acceptable but there is to be a blitz on incorrect grammar.
        地方口音还可以接受,但要下大力气纠正语法错误。
    2. N-COUNT (为吸引注意力的)大规模活动
      An advertising or publicity blitz is a major effort to make the public aware of something.
      1. On December 8 the media blitz began in earnest.
        12月8日,一场大规模媒体宣传活动轰轰烈烈地展开了。

    双语例句

    1. PR is more than blitzing the media with your press releases.
      公关不仅是让媒体帮你发布新闻而已。
    2. History suggests that technocrats do best when blitzing the mess made by incompetent and squabbling politicians.
      历史建议技术官僚做的最好的是快速收拾无能和争吵的政治家的烂摊子。