出租车的介绍英语怎么说
『壹』 出租车(TAXI ) 的英文怎么说用汉字说。
你好!
泰克sei
仅代表个人观点,不喜勿喷,谢谢。
『贰』 关于出租车的英语
the price of taking a taxi is according to the distance you ride, the initial price is ten yuan, then will be increase by 1.6 yuan per kilometer
『叁』 出租车的英语单词怎么写
taxi
英[ˈtæksi]
美[ˈtæksi]
n. 出租车; 滑行;
vi. 乘出租车; (指飞专机) 在地面或水面属滑行;
vt. 用出租车运送; 使滑行;
[例句]The taxi drew up in front of the Riviera Club
出租车在里维埃拉俱乐部门口停了下来。
[其他] 第三人称单数:taxis 复数:taxis 现在分词:taxiing 过去式:taxied
『肆』 出租车的英语怎么写怎么读
taxi
tai ke sei
你可以上网查一下,没法当面给你读,只能用拼音
『伍』 乘出租车用英语怎么说呢
乘出租车,英语是: take a taxi。
例句:
If we missed the last bus, we had to take a taxi.
如果我们错过了末班车,我们不得不打车回去。
I know you are arriving in Shantou tomorrow. I hope you take a taxi to my school.
我知道你明天要到达汕头,我希望你打的到我学校来。
Because of missing the last bus, we had to take a taxi.
由于错过了末班车我们不得不乘出租车。
I don't want to take a taxi. It's expensive.
我不想坐出租汽车,太贵了。
We have little time, so we should take a taxi instead of waiting for the bus.
我们没有什么时间了,还是叫一辆出租车,别等公共汽车了。
You had better take a taxi or you will be late.
你还是坐计程车走吧,否则你要迟到了。
You need to take a taxi.
你需要乘出租车。
『陆』 出租车的英语怎么念
出租车的英语是taxi,读音为英['tæksi]美['tæksi] 。
taxi 英['tæksi]美['tæksi]
n.出租车
v.用出租车运送;乘计程车;(飞机)滑行
名词复数:taxis 过去式:taxied
过去分词:taxied 现在分词:taxiing/taxying 第三人称单数:taxies/taxis
taxi的基本意思是“出租汽车”,指按时间或里程收费的计程车,是可数名词。
taxi用作动词时的意思是“(使)滑行”,既可用作及物动词,也可用作不及物动词。用作及物动词时,可接名词作宾语。
近义词区分
taxi, automobile, bus, car, lorry, truck
这六个词都可作“汽车”解。其区别是:
1、car和automobile意思相同,均指载人或载物的汽车。前者是一般用词,后者是正式用词; 前者主要用于英式英语,后者主要用于美式英语。
2、car是车的总称,尤指私人的小轿车。
3、bus指大型公共汽车。
4、lorry与truck均指载货卡车。前者主要用于英式英语,后者主要用于美式英语。
5、car在英美均可指火车车厢; truck在英国可指铁路上的敞篷货车。
6、taxi指出租车。
『柒』 “出租车”用英语怎么说
美式英语cab,英式taxi
『捌』 出租车(TAXI ) 的英文怎么说
taxi 英 ['tæksɪ] 美 ['tæksi]
vi. 乘出租车;滑行
vt. 使滑行;用出租车送内
n. 出租汽车
短语
taxi ride出租车旅行;乘坐出租车
taxi fare的士收费容;出租汽车费
taxi service出租汽车服务;叫车服务;出租车调度站
taxi meter车用计费器
(8)出租车的介绍英语怎么说扩展阅读
同近义词
1、cab
英 [kæb] 美 [kæb]
n. 驾驶室;出租汽车;出租马车
vi. 乘出租马车(或汽车)
Cab body驾驶室本体 ; 舱身
Cab Firm出租汽车公司
cab lamp司机室灯 ; 司机室的灯
crew cab双排座驾驶室 ; 双排座 ; 驾驶室 ; 双排设计
2、coast
英 [kəʊst] 美 [kost]
vi. 滑行;沿岸航行
vt. 沿…岸航行
n. 海岸;滑坡
n. (Coast)人名;(英)科斯特
Orville Coast奥维尔海岸
Kemp Coast坎普海岸
Bowman Coast鲍曼海岸
『玖』 出租车司机用英文翻译
出租车司机的英文:taxi driver
一、taxi 读法 英['tæksɪ]美['tæksi]
作不及物动词的意思:乘出租车;滑行
作及物动词的意思:使滑行;用出租车送
作名词的意思是:出租汽车
短语:
taxi driver出租车司机;的士司机
take a taxi乘出租车,搭出租车;打的
by taxi坐计程车
call a taxi打的;叫出租车
taxi standn. 出租车招呼站
二、driver 读法 英['draɪvə]美['draɪvɚ]
作名词的意思是:驾驶员;驱动程序;起子;传动器
短语:
bus driver公交车司机
device driver设备驱动程序
truck driver卡车司机
motor driver汽车司机;马达驱动器;电动驱动器
例句:
Arriving at the railway station, I put local knowledge to the test and ask a taxi driver.
到了火车站,为了检验自己对当地的了解程度,我请教了一个出租车司机。
(9)出租车的介绍英语怎么说扩展阅读
taxi的用法:
1、taxi的基本意思是“出租汽车”,指按时间或里程收费的计程车,是可数名词。
2、taxi用作动词时的意思是“(使)滑行”,既可用作及物动词,也可用作不及物动词。用作及物动词时,可接名词作宾语。
3、taxi, automobile, bus, car, lorry, truck这六个词都可作“汽车”解。其区别是:
car和automobile意思相同,均指载人或载物的汽车。前者是一般用词,后者是正式用词; 前者主要用于英式英语,后者主要用于美式英语;car是车的总称,尤指私人的小轿车。
bus指大型公共汽车。lorry与truck均指载货卡车。前者主要用于英式英语,后者主要用于美式英语。car在英美均可指火车车厢; truck在英国可指铁路上的敞篷货车。taxi指出租车。
『拾』 关于出租车简介(英语)
find it!
By the end of the 19th century, automobiles began to appear on city streets throughout the country. It was not long before a number of these cars were hiring themselves out in competition with horse-drawn carriages. Although these electric-powered cabs were slightly impractical (with batteries weighing upwards of eight hundred pounds), by 1899 there were nearly one hundred of them on New York's streets. Many believed that these new cabs would provide a cleaner, quieter, and faster way to travel. But progress has always had its price, and on September 13th of that year, a sixty-eight year-old man named Henry H. Bliss was helping a friend from a street car when a taxi swerved and hit him, giving Bliss the bious distinction of being the first American to die in an automobile accident, and giving cabbies a first glimpse at a reputation they would soon solidify.
Eight years later, the New York Taxicab Company made the bold decision to import six hundred cars from France. Powered by gasoline, these red-and-green-paneled cars were the first in a new generation of city transportation. Though automobiles still made up only a fraction of New York traffic, their popularity was growing, e primarily to their easy upkeep. With the accessibility of gas-powered cars and the introction of the taximeter (used to gauge miles traveled and time elapsed) the taxi instry flourished. By the teens, there were half a dozen large fleets, and thousands of independent owner/drivers. However, at fifty cents a mile, cabs were still geared toward the relatively wealthy.
By the 1920s many instrialists had realized the economic potential of a popular taxi instry. While the largest fleets were primarily owned by the major automobile manufacturers like General Motors and the Ford Motor Company, by far the biggest and most successful was the Checkered Cab Manufacturing Company. Founded by Morris Markin, a young Russian immigrant, Checker Cabs proced the large yellow and black taxis that would become one of the most recognizable symbols of mid-20th century urban life. Though proced in Kalamazoo, Michigan, Checker cabs were, for many years, the most popular taxis in New York City.
As companies like Checker grew, so did the need for enforceable regulations. Cabbies were often the victims of unfair labor practices, and passengers the victims of price gouging. Neither the police nor the Taxicab Commission could temper the corruption. With the increase in drivers ring the Depression, cabbies found themselves fighting for every fare. General unrest over driving conditions and salaries was exacerbated by news that the Checker Cab Company had been bribing the then Mayor, James J. Walker. Tensions grew and in 1934 more than 2,000 taxi drivers took over Times Square in what many called the biggest strike the city had seen.
In response to this unrest Mayor Fiorello H. La Guardia signed the Haas Act of 1937, which introced official taxi licenses and the medallion system that remains in place to this day. Medallions are small plates attached to the hood of a taxi, certifying it for passenger pick-up throughout the city. Providing a limited number of medallions, the government could keep a closer watch on the quality and quantity of taxis in the city. While attempting to assure better wages for the drivers, many of whom at the time were Irish, Italian, or Jewish immigrants working long days in difficult conditions, the new medallion system gave increased power to a handful of large fleet owners.