inroad
inroad — 名詞
- inroadsingular
- inroadsplural
1. progress that lets someone or something enter an area or gain influence there, o
打入;侵蝕
逐步打入某領域或削弱既有優勢
progress that lets someone or something enter an area or gain influence there, often by weakening what was already established
Cheap solar panels are making inroads into villages beyond the power grid.
平價太陽能板正逐步打入還沒有電網的村莊。
make inroads into + place or market
By autumn, streaming services had made deep inroads into cable TV's audience.
到了秋天,串流服務已大幅打入有線電視的觀眾群。
Long clinic waits made inroads on Tariq's lunch break every Tuesday.
漫長的門診等候時間每週二都在侵蝕 Tariq 的午休時間。
Local bookshops saw online sellers make inroads into holiday book sales.
當地書店眼看網路賣家逐步打入假期書市。
The startup's first inroad into the school market came through free trial classes.
那家新創第一次打入校園市場,是靠免費體驗課。
- progress
broader and more neutral, without the idea of cutting into someone else's position
- headway
stresses moving forward despite difficulty or delay
- encroachment
more negative and usually suggests unwanted spreading into another area or right
文法句型
make inroads into + noun
make inroads on + noun
an inroad into + noun
用法筆記
Most often appears in the plural after make, especially with into for markets, groups, or areas of activity. Use on when the idea is cutting into something limited, such as time, money, or profits.