might-have-been信息详情

might-have-been发音

意思翻译

n.本可实现或发生的事;未遂心愿的事

相似词语短语

have been───已经;一直;去过(现在完成时)

have been dead───已经死了

have been there───亲眼看到;直接了解;全都知道;曾到过那里;全都知道, 直接了解, 亲眼看到

l have been───我一直

have been to───v.曾经到过(去过)

have been in───呆在某个地方;去过某个地方

have you been───你有没有

have been on───已经开始了

might───n.强大力量,威力,势力;aux.可能,也许,可以(may的过去式);n.(Might)(美)迈特(人名)

双语使用场景

I heard what might have been an explosion.───我听到的可能是爆炸的声音。

They might have been soldiers in civvies.───他们可能是军队中的便衣。

He might have been murdered by a former client or someone harbouring a grudge.───他可能是被一个前委托人或某个怀有积怨的人谋杀了。

The snow men might have been the only folks happy to be caught in another blizzard on Thursday.───堆雪人成了在星期四另一场暴风雪中人们唯一的乐趣。

That might have been a bit ahead of its time -- "globalism" didn't even enter the Oxford English Dictionary until 1986.───这样的情节在当时或许太超前了,“全球主义”这个词直到1986年才被收入牛津英语词典。

It is possible that if a different host was used, a different set of untransferable genes might have been identified.───如果用不同的宿主做研究,可能会被发现一组不同的无法转移的基因。

For some of the projects, this might have been appropriate if done with sufficient planning and an appropriate automation framework.───有一些项目,这也许已经是很不错的了,可能做了充分的计划和一个合适的自动化框架。

Mr. Hayashi said he and others might have been lured into a false sense of security.───林先生说,他和其他人可能被骗进了一种虚假的安全感。

If he had had more common sense in spending, he might have been out of the woods financially by now.───如果他在花錢方面多些常識,他就老早脫離經濟困難。

英语使用场景

There's no point now in regretting the might-have-beens.

We can't afford to waste tears on "might-have-been." We need to turn the tears into sweat as we go after "what-can-be."

The expectations for Mr. Schwarzenegger's two remaining years in office are low, leaving many of his supporters to ponder the might-have-been.

It takes some imagination to share the contradictions, the unrealised hopes, the might-have-beens,[http://sentencedict.com/might-have-been.html] of the past.

We like to think about the might-have-beens.

Looking at the might-have-beens of stylistic variation is a way of making the elusive quality of good writing open to inspection.

This book is not concerned, however, with might-have-beens but with the facts as they were, so far as can be told.

With Bette Davis there was a poignant might-have-been relationship.

Byways of history, particularly might-have-beens, also suit the form well.