gross
adjective, adverb uk/ɡrəʊs/ us/ɡroʊs/
C1 总的,毛的;总共,全部
(in) total
A person's gross income is the money they earn before tax is deducted from it. 个人总收入是指税前的收入总和。
Once wrapped, the gross weight of the package is 2.1 kg. 包装后,这个包裹的毛重是2.1公斤。
She earns £30,000 a year gross. 她每年的总收入是3万英镑。
Compare: net adjective
- More examples
- I earn £15,000 gross, but my net income is about £12,000.
- His gross annual income is over half a million pounds.
- This graph shows the gross domestic product of all the European countries.
- Tax is payable on the gross weight of the cargo.
- The label gives the gross and net weight of the product.
gross
adjective uk/ɡrəʊs/ us/ɡroʊs/
(UNPLEASANT)
informal极其令人厌恶的,令人恶心的,令人不快的
extremely unpleasant
"Oh, gross!" she said, looking at the flies buzzing above the piles of dirty plates. “呀,真恶心!”她看着在一堆堆脏盘子上方飞来飞去的苍蝇说道。
(FAT)
臃肿难看的;庞大不雅观的
extremely fat or large and ugly
I'd put on ten kilos and felt gross in my bikini. 我体重增加了10公斤,穿着比基尼觉得臃肿难看。
(UNACCEPTABLE)
C1 [ before noun ] formal(尤指违法行为)严重的,恶劣的,极端的,不能接受的
(especially in law) unacceptable because clearly wrong
gross misconduct/indecency 严重渎职/猥亵
a gross violation of justice 严重违反公平
gross
verb [ T ] uk/ɡrəʊs/ us/ɡroʊs/
总收入为,总共赚得,获得…毛利
to earn a particular amount of money before tax is paid or costs are taken away
The film has grossed over $200 million this year. 这部电影今年总收入超过了两亿美元。
Phrasal verb
gross someone out 使(某人)恶心,令(某人)憎恶,令(某人)作呕
If something grosses you out, you think it is very unpleasant or disgusting.
He smells and he's dirty - he really grosses me out. 他全身臭烘烘的,肮脏透顶——真让我恶心。
gross
noun [ C ] old-fashioned uk/ɡrəʊs/ us/ɡroʊs/ gross
一罗(12打,144个)
(a group of) 144