browse
/braʊz/ (bre, ipa) · /braʊz/ (ame, ipa) · /ˈbrau̇z/ (ame, mw)
browse — verb
1. to spend time moving through pages or around a store, stopping only at things th
to spend time moving through pages or around a store, stopping only at things that catch your eye instead of choosing carefully.
At the train station, Priya browsed the travel magazines before boarding.
browse + magazines without full reading
Noa spent an hour browsing in the old bookshop near the river.
browse in + shop
Rows of jackets hung by the door, and Diego browsed without buying.
During lunch, the nurses browsed a photo album from last year's camp.
- look through
plain everyday phrase; often used for books, papers, and photos
- leaf through
mainly for pages you turn quickly by hand
- shop around
stresses visiting or comparing shops more than reading material
文法句型
browse + noun (magazine, shelves, shop)
browse through + noun
browse in/around + place
用法筆記
Common with 'through' for books or pages, and with 'in' or 'around' for shops and markets. Distinguish from sense 2: this sense is about physical pages or places, not an online space.
常見錯誤
2. to move from page to page online, reading or checking digital material that inte
to move from page to page online, reading or checking digital material that interests you.
After dinner, Omar browsed the train times on his phone.
browse + information on a device
The children sat by the window and browsed for birthday cake ideas.
browse for + noun online
At the library computer, Mei browsed quietly while her file downloaded.
A list of cheap rooms appeared as Yusuf browsed the hotel website.
- surf
informal; especially common for moving around the web casually
- scroll through
focuses on moving down a screen rather than visiting different pages
- look up
more specific; usually means finding one exact piece of information
文法句型
browse + noun (website, menu, photos)
browse the internet/web
browse for + noun
用法筆記
Often takes objects like 'website', 'menu', 'photos', or 'the internet', and it can also be followed by 'for' when the goal is loose rather than exact. Distinguish from sense 1 by the digital setting.
常見錯誤
3. (of animals) to eat leaves, grass, or small branches slowly while moving about.
(of animals) to eat leaves, grass, or small branches slowly while moving about.
At sunrise, two deer browsed on low branches behind the school.
browse on + plant food
Goats were browsing along the dry hillside after the rain stopped.
progressive form with animal subject
Near the fence, the camel browsed leaves from a small tree.
By noon, the sheep had browsed the new leaves beside the stream.
文法句型
browse on + noun
browse + noun (leaves, branches)
用法筆記
Subject must be an animal. Often used for animals eating leaves, shoots, or branches from bushes and trees, not just ordinary field grass. Distinguish from 'graze', which more strongly suggests feeding on grass.
常見錯誤
browse — noun
1. a short time spent looking through shops, books, or websites in a relaxed, unfix
a short time spent looking through shops, books, or websites in a relaxed, unfixed way.
Let's have a browse in the night market before we choose dinner.
have a browse
After a quick browse through the guidebook, Hana marked three beaches.
a browse through + noun
The twins had a quick browse of the toy shelves before lunch.
A short browse through the sales page showed cheaper tents.
- look-around
informal noun for checking a place without a fixed plan
- skim
closer to reading quickly, especially with text
文法句型
have a browse
a browse through + noun
用法筆記
Most common in the phrase 'have a browse'. It can refer to looking around in a physical place, through printed material, or on a website.