bigger

bigger [bɪgə]  [bɪgə] 

danci.911cha.com

原级:big

最高级:biggest

bigger 基本解释
大的,长大的;大的( big的比较级 );重要的;庞大的;大方的;
bigger 单语例句

1. \u0039\u0031\u0031\u67E5\u8BE2\u00B7\u82F1\u8BED\u5355\u8BCD

1. " All those will make trade easier and volume bigger, " Chou told Business Weekly.

2. That may be an impossible juggling act and raises a bigger question of how the government can fix the weaknesses the dispute has highlighted.

3. No morning show change would be bigger than a departure by Lauer, whose contract ends at the end of next year.

4. No wonder, the bubble in the housing market is getting bigger by the day.

5. China's Cabinet promised private investors a bigger role in industries from oil drilling to finance, and also promised to help private companies invest more abroad.

6. bigger

6. Chinese and Japanese tourism officials have called for more tourism cooperation and a bigger number of visits between the peoples in the two countries.

7. Bigger stars are likely to cameo in the show, he added.

8. But a win at Cannes can nonetheless bring bigger audiences and help independent filmmakers maintain their artistic freedom.

9. bigger

9. But the bigger picture is that this is China's latest step towards opening its capital account and further facilitating the internationalisation of its currency.

10. bigger

10. This would allow banks to play a bigger role in product development and pricing, and promote capital account convertibility of renminbi in an orderly manner.

bigger 英英释义

bigger的解释

adj

1. large or big relative to something else

    Synonym: larger