Ventilate Meaning in English
word
ˈvɛnəˌɫeɪt/, /ˈvɛntəˌɫeɪt
VEN-tuh-layt
vˈɛntɪlˌeɪt
VEN-ti-layt
释义
To allow fresh air to enter and move in a space; also can mean to discuss something openly, especially concerns or opinions.
用法与细微差别
Often used in physical contexts (rooms, buildings), and less commonly for expressing ideas ('ventilate an issue'). In technical/medical fields, 'ventilate' refers to assisting someone's breathing, especially with machines. Usually formal or technical.
Spanish: ventilarPortuguese (BR): ventilarPortuguese (PT): ventilarChinese (Simplified): 通风Chinese (Traditional): 通風Hindi: हवादार करना - वेंटिलेट करनाArabic: تهويةBengali: বাতাস চলাচল করানো - প্রকাশ করা (মতামত)Russian: проветривать - высказывать (мнение)Japanese: 換気する - 吐露する(意見を)Vietnamese: thông gió - bày tỏ (ý kiến, lo ngại)Korean: 환기하다 - 드러내다(의견을)Turkish: havalandırmak - dile getirmek (görüş/şikayet)Urdu: ہوا دینا - کھل کر اظہار کرنا (خیالات/فکر)Indonesian: mengalirkan udara - mengutarakan (pendapat/keluhan)
例句
Please ventilate the kitchen after cooking.
basic
It's important to ventilate the room every day.
basic
Open the windows to ventilate the house.
basic
We need to ventilate the office—it's stuffy in here.
natural
Doctors had to ventilate the patient after surgery.
natural
At the meeting, she decided to ventilate her concerns about the new policy.
natural