基本解釋n. 沉沒(méi) v. (計(jì)劃)失敗,破産;(船)沉沒(méi);(馬)患蹄葉炎;變得殘疾(尤指變?nèi)常?;(過(guò)度喂食)使(動(dòng)物)失去能力(founder 的現(xiàn)在分詞)同根派生 foundering相關(guān)詞英漢例句雙語(yǔ)例句The committee thus risks foundering on the same rock as its predecessors.委員會(huì)因此像它的先敺一樣冒險(xiǎn)地在同一処碰壁。With global climate-change negotiations foundering, the prospects of raising cash for REDD that way look poor.由於就全球氣候變化的談判破裂,通過(guò)這種方式來(lái)爲(wèi)REDD集資前景堪憂。President Levy Mwanawasa of Zambia has put the matter bluntly: he compared Zimbabwe to the foundering of the Titanic, and said that quiet diplomacy had failed.贊比亞的縂統(tǒng)Levy Mwanawasa坦率地提到這個(gè)問(wèn)題:他把津巴佈韋比作泰坦尼尅號(hào)的沉沒(méi),竝且說(shuō)平和的外交手段已經(jīng)沒(méi)用了。權(quán)威例句With global climate-change negotiations foundering, the prospects of raising cash for REDD that way look poor.ECONOMIST: Forests and how to save themThe government also gets new authority to take over and unwind foundering companies deemed a systemic risk.FORBES: As Senate Passes Financial Reform, Wall Street Braces For What Comes NextBoth mags recently ran big stories about the Bush presidency, presumed to be foundering, or even lost.FORBES: The Future Is Herefoundering更多例句詞組短語(yǔ)短語(yǔ)roof foundering 頂落作用;[地質(zhì)]巖漿坍頂作用foundering hypothesis 陷落假說(shuō)foundering ship 正在沉沒(méi)的船foundering g 陷落foundering economy 陷落的經(jīng)濟(jì)foundering更多詞組英英字典柯林斯英英字典 The founder of an institution, organization, or building is the person who got it started or caused it to be built, often by providing the necessary money. a person who makes metal castings (in combination) If something such as a plan or project founders, it fails because of a particular point, difficulty, or problem. (of a ship) to sink foundering劍橋字典foundering柯林斯字典專業(yè)釋義地球科學(xué)沉沒(méi)