sideline
柯林斯词典
1. N-COUNT A sideline is something that you do in addition to your main job in order to earn extra money. 兼職
It was quite a lucrative sideline. 那是一份很賺錢的兼職工作。
2. N-PLURAL The sidelines are the lines marking the long sides of the playing area, for example, on a football field or tennis court. (運動場地的) 邊線
3. N-PLURAL If you are on the sidelines in a situation, you do not influence events at all, either because you have chosen not to be involved, or because other people have not involved you. 置身事外
France no longer wants to be left on the sidelines when critical decisions are made. 法國再也不想在做出重大決定時被擱置一旁。
4. V-T If someone or something is sidelined, they are made to seem unimportant and not included in what people are doing. 把…排除在外; 使靠邊[usu passive]
For months he had been under pressure to resign and was about to be sidelined anyway. 幾個月以來他一直処在辤職的壓力下,他無論如何都是要靠邊站了。
返回 sideline
sideline /ˈsaɪdˌlaɪn/ (sidelining,sidelined,sidelines)
剑桥词典
sideline noun [C] (JOB)
an activity that you do as well as your main job
副業,兼職工作
Jim works in a bank , but teaches French in the evenings as a sideline. 吉姆在銀行工作,但他在晚上兼職教法語。
sideline noun [C] (SPORT)
mainly US (UK usually touchline)a line that shows the position of the side of an area where a sport is played
(運動場地上的)邊線
The ball fell just inside/on/outside the sideline. 球正好落在了邊線內/上/外。