present tense | |
I/you/we/they | occupy |
he/she/it | occupies |
present participle | occupying |
past tense | occupied |
past participle | occupied |
Warehouses occupied most of the site. 仓库占去了大部分的场地。
Commercial photography occupied much of his time. 商业摄影占去了他大量的时间。
an occupying army/force 占领军
I spoke at length with various religious folk during my time in Occupy London.
I need some way to occupy the kids for an hour. 我得想个办法让孩子们忙上1个小时。
You keep him occupied down here while I check upstairs. 我在楼上检查时你让他在下面别闲着。
He's still fully occupied with writing his report. 他仍在全身心地忙着写报告。
You need to find something to occupy yourself with when you retire. 退休后你得找点事让自己忙碌起来。
The problem has been occupying me all week. 我整个星期都在想这个问题。
My mind's been too occupied with moving house to think about a holiday. 我的脑子里一直想着搬家的事,根本没空考虑休假。
to move into a public place and stay there for a period of time in order to show that you strongly disagree with a policy, law, etc
'Nearly two weeks ago, an estimated 3,000 people assembled at Battery Park with the intention of occupying Wall Street. They were an eclectic group … But nearly everyone was angry at what they saw as a culture of out-of-control greed.'
Time 29th September 2001'National View: Why we should support the occupation of Wall Street … October 2011 will mark a time in U.S. history when the people of the United States, facing great economic peril, rose up to demand economic justice.'
SouthCoast Today 27th October 2011'Occupy Calgary members staying in the downtown core need to pack up and leave, a city official said yesterday … Occupiers have made it clear they will accommodate events at the plaza but have no intentions of leaving.'
Metro Calgary 27th October 2011There's been a swathe of protests during the last few weeks which have brought an everyday verb into the spotlight. In the Macmillan Dictionary this is a 'three star', 'red' word, belonging to the set of lexical items which are the most frequent in the core vocabulary of English speakers. When a group of protesters parked themselves in New York's financial district on September 17th 2011, they kicked off a chain of events which has unwittingly breathed a new shade of meaning into the verb occupy.
the verb is now frequently being used with this very specific sense of entering a public space in order to demonstrate
The verb occupy has various senses, but two key ones are the actions of using a room, building, area of land etc, and of taking control of a place by using military force. It therefore seems logical that it was chosen as the main identifier for demonstrations involving activities which lie somewhere at the intersection of these two shades of meaning.
The Occupy protests are an ongoing series of international demonstrations primarily directed against capitalism and economic inequality, sparked in particular by what are now referred to as austerity measures, official action taken by governments in order to reduce spending in the face of economic problems. Kicking off in Wall Street in New York, the Occupy protests have now spread right across the world, including such prominent locations as Frankfurt, Rome, Sydney, Hong Kong, London and various cities in the United Kingdom. As well as marches involving as many as 10,000 protesters, the demonstrations have involved large numbers of people 'camping out', aka occupying, key venues in cities across the world. One notable example was around the entrances to St Paul's Cathedral in central London, where over 200 tents formed a ramshackle campsite. This subsequently caused officials to close the cathedral due to health and safety concerns, the first time its doors have been closed to the public since the Second World War Blitz.
The Occupy movement has gained momentum very rapidly, causing a sudden explosion in the frequency of occurrence of the word occupy in online sources (and also in the number of Google searches for the word). As well as the use of occupy in the description of particular demos (e.g. Occupy London, Occupy Calgary, etc), and the hashtag #Occupy to identify the movement in social media, the verb is now frequently being used with this very specific sense of entering a public space in order to demonstrate. The act of doing so can now correspondingly be referred to as occupation, and those taking part in the protests are sometimes dubbed occupiers.
The verb occupy dates back to the 14th century, its origins in Latin occupare meaning 'seize'. Interestingly, during the 16th and 17th century it was used as a euphemism for 'have sexual relations with', causing it to fall out of general usage until the late 18th century.
The word occupy has achieved something approaching cult status in the online world in recent weeks, with plenty of evidence of the concept being seized upon to humorous effect – such as Occupy the Bar, a 'movement' with the slogan 'What do we want? An ice cold Guinness! When do we want it? Now!'. Its use has snowballed to such an extent that the American Dialect Society is now considering whether it should join the ranks of previous winners app and tweet as a candidate for its 'Word of the Year'.
👨🏻🏫 Mr. Ng 麥美倫詞典 📚 – macmillan.mister5️⃣.net
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