errand
/ˈerənd/ (bre, ipa) · /ˈerənd/ (ame, ipa) · /ˈer-ənd ˈe-rənd/ (ame, mw)
errand — 名詞
- errandsingular
- errandsplural
1. a brief journey made to take care of a small piece of business, such as deliveri
差事;跑腿
為小事外出辦事的短程任務
a brief journey made to take care of a small piece of business, such as delivering a parcel, collecting an order, or buying a few things from a shop
Mrs. Chen asked her son to run an errand to the post office before it closed.
陳太太請兒子在郵局關門前跑一趟差事去寄包裹。
collocation: run (an) errand
Yuna stopped by the pharmacy on her way home to do a quick errand for her grandmother.
Yuna 在回家的路上順道去藥局,幫奶奶跑一趟差事。
collocation: do (an) errand for [someone]
Diego went on several errands during his lunch break, including paying a bill and buying groceries.
Diego 利用午休時間跑了幾趟差事,包括繳費和買雜貨。
Fatima had to run a last-minute errand to pick up her dry cleaning before the shop shut at six.
Fatima 必須在六點關門前趕一趟臨時差事,去拿她的乾洗衣物。
The office intern was sent on an errand to deliver a signed contract to the client's lawyer.
辦公室實習生被派去跑腿,將一份簽署好的合約送到客戶的律師那裡。
- task
broader — any piece of work, not necessarily involving travel
- chore
routine household or small duty, often boring; overlaps with errand but does not always require going out
- assignment
work given by a supervisor or teacher; more formal and specific than errand
文法句型
run (an) errand
go on (an) errand
do (an) errand
用法筆記
Errand is almost always used with run, do, or go on. Common fixed phrases include run errands (plural, for a set of tasks) and run an errand (singular, for one specific trip). Subject can be the person doing the errand or the person who requests it.