柯林斯詞典shackle /???k?l/ (shackling,shackled,shackles) 1. V-T If you are shackled by something, it prevents you from doing what you want to do. 阻礙[正式] [usu passive] The labour unions are shackled by the law. 該工會(huì)被法律所羈絆。 ...people who find themselves shackled to a high-stress job. …發(fā)現(xiàn)自己爲(wèi)高負(fù)荷工作所束縛的人們。2. N-PLURAL If you throw off the shackles of something, you reject it or free yourself from it because it was preventing you from doing what you wanted to do. 桎梏[文學(xué)性] [with supp] ...a country ready to throw off the shackles of its colonial past. …一個(gè)願(yuàn)意甩掉其殖民歷史的桎梏的國(guó)家。3. N-PLURAL Shackles are two metal rings joined by a chain which are fastened around someone's wrists or ankles in order to prevent them from moving or escaping. 鐐銬 He unbolted the shackles on Billy's hands. 他打開(kāi)比利的手銬。4. V-T To shackle someone means to put shackles on them. 用鐐銬銬 ...the chains that were shackling his legs. …銬著他雙腿的鎖鏈。 返回 shackles劍橋詞典a pair of metal rings connected by a chain and fastened to a person's wrists or the bottom of their legs to prevent them from escaping 鐐銬 The shackles had begun to cut into his ankles . 鐐銬已經(jīng)開(kāi)始卡進(jìn)他的腳踝了。 something that prevents you from doing what you want to do 束縛,障礙 The press , once heavily censored , has managed to shake off its shackles. 新聞界一度受到嚴(yán)格讅查,現(xiàn)已設(shè)法擺脫了束縛。 返回 shackles