First, pronunciation
English: [/p (r)/]; United States: [/p? r/]
Second, Chinese translation.
Appear, look, seem; Appear, present, appear; Appear in court (to testify or stand trial); Publication; Performance; Record; Origin, first use
Third, form.
Third person singular: representation
Present participle: appear
Past tense: appeared
Past participle: appeared.
Fourth, memory skills.
Ap- Chao, Xiang+Pear-See you
Five, phrase collocation
appear in ...
Apparerfoffline appears offline.
take the form of
Appear on the stage
Bilingual examples of intransitive verbs
1. What? Appeared? Easy? And then what? Confidence? Before? That? Match.
Before the game, he looked calm and confident.
2. They? Appeared? Surprising? Pessimism? About what? Their? Opportunity? Yes? Win. ?
They are surprisingly pessimistic about the possibility of victory.
3. Is it there? Appear? Where to? Is it? Ann? Elements? Yes? The truth? Are you online? His? Story.
There seems to be some truth in his statement.
4. cracks? Has it started? Where to? Appear? Are you online? That? Walls.
Cracks began to appear in the wall.
5. in? That? Morning? That? The sky? Appeared? Answer? Heavy? Shade? Yes? Mottled? grey
In the morning, the sky is mottled with dark gray.
6. flowers? Appeared,? But? Fruit? Failure? Where to? Form.
Flowers bloom, but there is no result.
Seven. use
1. "Appear" and "arrive" refer to attending or appearing in public places, but they also refer to being visible or becoming clear. Less refers to a specific background or source, which is extended to "appearance", "publication" and "appearance";
2. When making this solution, it is an intransitive verb, followed by adverbials such as time and place;
3. Another meaning is "seems", "appears" and "looks like", which contains the taste that the impression obtained due to visual errors, limited opinions or cover-up by others may not be consistent with the facts.