apron
apron — noun
1. a covering, usually made of cloth or plastic, that ties around your waist and ha
a covering, usually made of cloth or plastic, that ties around your waist and hangs downward across your chest and stomach so that food, paint, or dirt does not get on the clothes underneath.
Mom tied a flowery cotton apron around her waist before kneading the dough.
tie an apron around the waist
The chef wiped his oily hands on the front of his white apron.
wipe hands on an apron
Daniel put on a plastic apron before painting the garden fence.
Each child got a small red apron for the school baking class.
Her leather apron was stained with sawdust from the workshop.
文法句型
wear an apron
tie/put on an apron
用法筆記
Subject is usually a person doing cooking, cleaning, painting, or craftwork. Often modified by a material word (cotton, plastic, leather, rubber) that signals the activity.
常見錯誤
2. a flat, hard-surfaced area beside a terminal building where planes park so that
a flat, hard-surfaced area beside a terminal building where planes park so that they can be loaded, refuelled, or prepared for the next flight.
Three jumbo jets were parked on the apron, waiting for new passengers.
on the apron
Ground crew rushed across the apron to refuel the small commuter plane.
across the apron + ground operations
Heavy rain flooded part of the apron and delayed boarding for an hour.
From the gate window, Mei watched a baggage truck circle the apron.
- runway
the long strip used for take-off and landing, not for parking
文法句型
on the apron
park/refuel on the apron
用法筆記
Distinguish from sense 3: this sense always names an outdoor paved area at an airport, never a stage. Often appears with 'on the' and aviation verbs like 'park', 'refuel', 'taxi', or 'load'.
常見錯誤
3. the strip of stage that sticks out toward the audience beyond the main curtain,
the strip of stage that sticks out toward the audience beyond the main curtain, allowing actors to perform very close to the people watching.
The young actor stepped onto the apron and delivered his speech directly to the front row.
step onto the apron + audience-facing speech
During the encore, the singer walked along the apron, shaking hands with delighted fans.
walk along the apron
A single spotlight lit the apron while the rest of the stage stayed dark.
Shakespearean comedies often use the apron for jokes aimed at the audience.
- backstage
the area hidden behind the curtain
文法句型
step onto the apron
on the apron
用法筆記
Distinguish from sense 2: this sense is part of a theatre stage, never an airport surface. Almost always appears with definite article 'the' and theatre verbs like 'step onto', 'walk along', or 'light'.