[V-RECIP 相互动词]碰撞;相撞;撞上 If two or more moving people or objects collide, they crash into one another. If a moving person or object collides with a person or object that is not moving, they crash into them.
[pl-n V]
[V with n]
[V with n (non-recip)]
Two trains collided head-on in north-eastern Germany early this morning...
今天早上德国东北部两列火车迎面相撞。
Racing up the stairs, he almost collided with Daisy...
他飞奔上楼,差点撞到黛西。
He collided with a pine tree near the North Gate.
他撞到了北门旁边的一棵松树上。
2
[V-RECIP 相互动词](目标、意见等)冲突,抵触 If the aims, opinions, or interests of one person or group collide with those of another person or group, they are very different from each other and are therefore opposed.
[V with n]
[pl-n V]
The aims of the negotiators in New York again seem likely to collide with the aims of the warriors in the field...
看来,纽约谈判人员的目标可能会再次与战场上勇士们的目标发生冲突。
In the next two years, Nasser regularly collided with the different Western powers, who refused to arm him...
随后的两年里,纳赛尔不断与拒绝为他提供武器装备的几个西方大国发生冲突。
What happens when the two interests collide will make a fascinating spectacle.
两种利益发生冲突时将会上演一场好戏。
Oxford
col·lide/kəˈlaɪd; NAmEkəˈlaɪd/verb1[intransitive ]if two people, vehicles, etc. collide,they crash into each other; if a person, vehicle, etc. collideswith another, or with sth that is not moving, they crash into it 碰撞;相撞◆The car and the van collided head-on in thick fog.那辆小轿车和货车在浓雾中迎面相撞。collidewith sth/sb ◆The car collided head-on with the van.那辆小轿车与货车迎面相撞。◆As he fell, his head collided with the table.他跌倒时头部撞上了桌子。☞synonyms at
crash
2[intransitive ]collide(with sb) (over sth) ( formal) (of people, their opinions, etc. 人、意见等)to disagree strongly 严重不一致;冲突;抵触◆They regularly collide over policy decisions.他们经常在政策决策上发生冲突。☞see also
1to hit something or someone that is moving in a different direction from you → collision: A car and a van collided on the motorway.collide with I ran around the corner, and almost collided with Mrs Laurence. Two trains collided head-on (=when they were moving directly towards each other).RegisterIn everyday English, people usually say run into rather than collide with:· Her car ran into the back of a truck.2to disagree strongly with a person or group, especially on a particular subjectcollide with The president has again collided with Congress over his budget plans.3if two very different ideas, ways of thinking etc collide, they come together and produce an interesting result: Istanbul, where East and West collide.
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