stream

/striːm/ (bre, ipa) · /striːm/ (ame, ipa) · /ˈstrēm/ (ame, mw)

stream — noun

  • streamsingular
  • streamsplural

1. a small, narrow body of water that moves naturally across the land through a gro

1.名詞A2
釋義

a small, narrow body of water that moves naturally across the land through a groove worn into the earth, often feeding into a river or lake.

例句

The children spent the afternoon catching frogs in the stream behind their house.

A clear mountain stream ran through the forest, making a soft sound as it passed over the rocks.

geographical description of a stream

同義詞
  • brook

    even smaller than a stream, often poetic or literary

  • creek

    common in American English; slightly larger than a brook but smaller than a river

  • rivulet

    very small stream; formal or literary

文法句型

a stream of [water/liquid]

stream + geographical name

用法筆記

Smaller than a river. In everyday speech, 'brook' and 'creek' are common alternatives, though 'stream' is the most neutral term for any naturally flowing channel of water.

常見錯誤

The stream near my house is very wide, like an ocean.
The stream near my house is narrow enough to jump across.
💡A stream is small; for a large body of water, use 'river'.

2. a continuous movement of liquid, gas, or fine particles, often coming from a sou

2.名詞B1
釋義

a continuous movement of liquid, gas, or fine particles, often coming from a source with some force or pressure.

例句

A stream of hot water shot out from the broken pipe and flooded the kitchen floor.

The mechanic noticed a slow stream of oil leaking from underneath the car engine.

a stream of [liquid] — continuous flow from a source

同義詞
  • flow

    broader term; can be used for any continuous movement, not necessarily from a source

  • current

    emphasises direction and speed within a larger body of fluid

  • trickle

    very slow, thin stream of liquid

文法句型

a stream of [liquid/gas/fluid]

用法筆記

Unlike sense 1 (a natural water channel), this sense describes the physical movement of any fluid substance. The stream is the flow itself, not the channel it moves through.

常見錯誤

A stream of people entered the hall.
A stream of blood ran down his arm.
💡Use this sense for liquids and gases only; for people or objects, see sense 4 ('continuous flow of things or people').

3. the way that water is heading as it moves, often used to describe position or mo

3.名詞B1
釋義

the way that water is heading as it moves, often used to describe position or movement relative to the current.

例句

The fisherman rowed his boat against the stream and made slow progress through the strong current.

against the stream — moving opposite to the current

Fallen leaves floated gently down the stream, carried along by the slow-moving water.

同義詞
  • current

    more common for describing the speed or force of water movement

  • flow

    similar but broader; can describe any movement of water

文法句型

against the stream

with the stream

upstream

downstream

用法筆記

Almost always used with prepositions: 'upstream' (against the flow), 'downstream' (with the flow), 'with the stream', 'against the stream'. Not used as a standalone count noun for direction.

4. people, vehicles, messages, or events that arrive or happen one after another wi

4.名詞B1
釋義

people, vehicles, messages, or events that arrive or happen one after another with little or no gap between them.

例句

A steady stream of visitors walked through the museum gates all morning.

a stream of [people] — continuous movement of individuals

Arjun's phone buzzed with a non-stop stream of messages from the group chat during the meeting.

同義詞
  • flow

    similar meaning but more neutral; 'stream' emphasises steady, uninterrupted movement

  • flood

    suggests an overwhelming or excessive amount, stronger in intensity

  • cascade

    suggests something falling or arriving in stages, one after another

文法句型

a stream of [people/vehicles/words/events]

用法筆記

Commonly used with 'steady', 'constant', 'continuous', 'endless' before 'stream of'. The subject can be abstract (messages, ideas, complaints) or concrete (people, cars).

常見錯誤

A stream of water came from the pipe.
A stream of customers entered the shop.
💡For physical liquids, use sense 2; for people or abstract things, use this sense.

5. a class formed by putting pupils of roughly equal ability and age together for l

5.名詞B2
釋義

a class formed by putting pupils of roughly equal ability and age together for lessons, as practised in some schools.

例句

At the age of eleven, students in British secondary schools are placed into different streams based on their test results.

British education system — ability grouping

Élise was moved to the top stream in mathematics after she scored full marks on the final exam.

同義詞
  • track

    American English equivalent

  • set

    UK term for subject-specific ability groups, often interchangeable with 'stream'

文法句型

[be placed/put] in a stream

the top/bottom stream

用法筆記

Primarily British English. In American English, the equivalent term is 'track'. The practice of 'streaming' is called 'ability grouping' or 'tracking' in the US.

常見錯誤

I had a stream of math homework.
My son is in the top stream for science.
💡This sense refers to a class grouping, not a quantity of work.

6. digital audio, video, or other content that is delivered via the internet in an

6.名詞B1
釋義

digital audio, video, or other content that is delivered via the internet in an unbroken chain and can be played as it arrives, without waiting for a full download.

例句

Mizuki watched a live stream of the concert on her phone while waiting for the bus.

live stream — real-time broadcast over the internet

The video stream kept pausing because the internet connection in the hotel was too slow.

同義詞
  • feed

    broader term, can refer to any continuously updated content (e.g. news feed, social media feed)

  • broadcast

    traditional term for TV/radio; 'stream' is internet-specific

  • livestream

    specifically a real-time stream as it happens

文法句型

stream [of video/audio]

watch/listen to a stream

live stream

用法筆記

Colloquially often shortened to 'stream' in phrases like 'watch a stream' or 'go live on stream'. The verb form (sense 3) is more active, while the noun refers to the content being delivered.

常見錯誤

I downloaded a stream of the movie.
I watched a stream of the movie online.
💡Streaming is not downloading; the data is played in real time and not saved permanently.

7. a connected series of events, ideas, or trends that seem to move forward in a pa

7.名詞C1
釋義

a connected series of events, ideas, or trends that seem to move forward in a particular direction, like a flow of history or thought.

例句

The novelist's work is famous for using the technique of stream of consciousness to reveal her characters' inner thoughts.

stream of consciousness — literary technique of continuous inner thought

Political analysts noted a steady stream of progressive reforms that changed the country's legal system over two decades.

同義詞
  • course

    suggests a natural or expected path of development

  • current

    emphasises the direction of ideas or opinions

  • trend

    more concrete and measurable; often used in data and statistics

文法句型

the stream of [history/thought/consciousness]

against the stream of [trend/opinion]

用法筆記

This is the most abstract noun sense. Often appears in fixed literary or formal phrases like 'stream of consciousness', 'stream of history', 'the mainstream' (the prevailing trend). Not commonly used in everyday speech.

stream — verb