1.(使)大吃一惊,(使)震惊,(使)吓一跳,(使)惊跳
1.〈美〉吃惊,震惊;惊跳
1.to make a person or animal feel suddenly frightened or surprised by doing something that they do not expect
1.She startles Meg's mother by reassuring her of the existence of a tesseract--a sort of "wrinkle" in space and time.
她startles梅格的母亲的安慰她的存在tesseract-一种“皱纹”在空间和时间。
2.Now December 7 is dawning bright and blue over America's Pacific coast, and with it breaks the news that startles an industry.
12月7日,令整个产业震惊的消息点亮了蓝色的美国太平洋海岸。
3.He startles them in the hallway to prove his point, which sets off an on-going competition of psuedo-attacks.
为证明自己的观点,他在走廊上吓她们,结果反被制服。
4.If it suddenly startles you in your walk . I will step side and take another path .
如果在你走路时会把你吓倒,我就移开脚步走别的路。
5.When Gerrard first joins the England team, the quality of training startles him.
杰拉德初入国家队时,训练的质量让他大吃一惊。
6.But if we're engrossed by something, a crossword puzzle, say, and someone startles us, our leap is less pronounced.
但当我们全神贯注的投入到某件事中,好比说纵横填字游戏,这是要是有人吓唬我们,我们跳的则不会太明显。
7.Their gift is sudden illumination, and it often startles others.
他们的天赋是突然的照明,而且往往惊动其他人。
8.His movement startles her and she jumps.
他的动作吓了她一跳。
9.The stern voice startles you.
一个严厉的声音把你吓个半死。
10.That is why she is always on the lookout for possible danger and startles easily.
这也就是她为什么总是关注着可能出现的危险而且容易一惊一乍。