shadow

shadow — verb

  • shadowpresent simple I / you / we / they
  • shadows3rd person singular
  • shadowing-ing form
  • shadowedpast simple

1. to move along behind someone, often secretly, watching where they go and what th

1.動詞及物B1
釋義

to move along behind someone, often secretly, watching where they go and what they do.

例句

A private detective shadowed the man for three days.

collocation: detective shadowed [person]

Zuri felt nervous when she realised a stranger was shadowing her.

continuous form: was shadowing

同義詞
  • follow

    more general; does not imply secrecy

  • tail

    informal; strongly suggests secret surveillance

  • trail

    suggests following at a distance over time

文法句型

shadow + noun/pronoun

be + shadowing + noun/pronoun

用法筆記

Often describes following without the person's knowledge. Frequently used in crime, investigation, or news contexts.

常見錯誤

The car was shadowing behind the bus.
The car was shadowing the bus.
💡shadow is transitive; no preposition needed.
He shadowed after her to see where she went.
He shadowed her to see where she went.
💡shadow does not take a preposition like 'after'.

2. to join a worker during their normal day so that you can watch and understand wh

2.動詞及物B1
釋義

to join a worker during their normal day so that you can watch and understand what their job involves.

例句

Hannah spent a day shadowing a nurse at the city hospital.

spend time + shadowing

The programme lets students shadow an engineer for two weeks.

let + object + infinitive: lets [someone] shadow

同義詞
  • observe

    less hands-on; you may watch without following every step

  • accompany

    focuses on being together, not learning by watching

文法句型

shadow + noun/pronoun

spend time + shadowing + noun/pronoun

用法筆記

Common in careers education and training contexts. The person being shadowed is usually aware and has agreed to participate.

常見錯誤

I will shadow at a doctor.
I will shadow a doctor.
💡shadow needs a direct object; no preposition.
She shadowed her teacher to learn medicine.
She shadowed her teacher to learn about the job.
💡clarify that shadowing is for observing, not direct study.

3. to block light from falling onto a surface, so that a dark shape forms there.

3.動詞及物B1
釋義

to block light from falling onto a surface, so that a dark shape forms there.

例句

Tall buildings shadow the garden, so it stays cool all day.

subject = building that blocks light

A large oak tree shadows the front of the old farmhouse.

同義詞
  • shade

    more common in everyday English for blocking light; shadow is slightly more formal

  • darken

    broader; can refer to any loss of light, not just from one object

反義詞

文法句型

noun + shadows + noun

用法筆記

Literally about light and shade. Often describes how a physical object creates shade by standing between the sun and another surface.

4. to make someone feel unhappy or less hopeful, often because of a lasting problem

4.動詞及物B1
釋義

to make someone feel unhappy or less hopeful, often because of a lasting problem or sad event.

例句

The death of her mother shadowed the rest of her childhood.

subject = sad event

A sense of failure shadowed his final months at the company.

abstract subject: sense of failure

同義詞
  • darken

    stronger; suggests a sudden or dramatic change in mood

  • cloud

    more common; suggests a feeling of heaviness or threat

  • overshadow

    also means to make less happy; slightly stronger and more common in modern English

反義詞

文法句型

noun + shadows + noun

be + shadowed + by + noun

用法筆記

Almost always figurative — a problem or bad event is the subject. The passive form (be shadowed by) is especially common in written English.

常見錯誤

The bad news shadowed.
The bad news shadowed the event.
💡shadow is transitive and needs a direct object.

shadow — noun

shadow — adjective