Online Google Dictionary

bookings 中文解釋 wordnet sense Collocation Usage Collins Definition
Noun
/ˈbo͝okiNG/,
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bookings, plural;
  1. An act of reserving accommodations, travel, etc., or of buying a ticket in advance
    • - the hotel does not handle group bookings
    • - early booking is essential
  2. An engagement for a performance by an entertainer
    • - TV show bookings were mysteriously canceled

  1. (booked) reserved in advance
  2. (booking) engagement: employment for performers or performing groups that lasts for a limited period of time; "the play had bookings throughout the summer"
  3. (booking) the act of reserving (a place or passage) or engaging the services of (a person or group); "wondered who had made the booking"
  4. (Booked!) Booked! was a radio programme that originally aired from October 1995 to April 2000. There were thirty 35-minute episodes and it was broadcast on BBC Radio 4. It starred Ian McMillan, Mark Thomas, David Stafford, Stuart Maconie, Linda Smith, Dillie Keane, Miles Kington, and Roger McGough.
  5. (Booking (professional wrestling)) Professional wrestling has accrued a considerable amount of slang, in-references, and jargon. Much of it stems from the industry's origins in the days of carnivals and circuses, and the slang itself is often referred to as "carny talk. ...
  6. (booking) The act or process of writing something down in (a) book(s), e.g. in accounting; A reservation for a service, such as accommodation in an hotel; The engagement of a performer for a particular performance; The issuing of a caution which is, in theory at least, written down in a book, ...
  7. (Booked) refers to the administrative step taken after the arrested person is brought to the police station, which involves entry of the person’s name, the crime for which the arrest was made, and other relevant facts on the police docket, and which may also include photographing, fingerprinting ...
  8. (Booked) This is the term that is used when a referee is writing a player's name down because the player has been given either a yellow or red card.
  9. (Booked) Refers to the location where the transaction is recorded, which may differ from the location/country of negotiation.
  10. (Booked) This refers to the procedures necessary to process you can make you into a case.
  11. (Booked) To receive a yellow card or red card from the official.
  12. (Booked) means that the patient has a firm treatment date within the next six months.
  13. (Booked) when a player is deemed to have contravened the rules so his name and number are noted by the referee.
  14. caught and booked by the police.
  15. The booking system handles reservations for up to 9 people. Reservations can be made until 6 pm on the day before the date in question. Your reservation is confirmed when you receive a confirmation complete with reservation number. ...
  16. (BOOKING) A term used synonymously with a job that has been offered to the model and accepted.
  17. (Booking) A firm commitment to a performer to do a specific job
  18. (Booking) An arrangement with a steamship company for the acceptance and carriage of freight.
  19. (Booking) the act of noting the offender in a cautionable offence, which results in either a yellow card, or in the case of a "second booking", a red card.^[37]
  20. (BOOKING) Part of the process of being arrested in which the details of who a person is and why he or she was arrested are recorded into the police records.
  21. (Booking) when a yellow card is given by the referee
  22. (Booking) When applying paste onto wallpaper, the procedure of temporarily folding, not creasing, pasted surfaces on to each other for easier handling and allowing time for the adhesive to soak into the paper, keeping it tacky until ready to hang. ...
  23. (Booking) The process of photographing, fingerprinting, and recording identifying data of a suspect. This process follows the arrest.
  24. (Booking) A modeling job or paid assignment.
  25. (Booking) 2.1 The Owner will confirm the booking upon receipt of the deposit of 20% of the rental charge (“the Deposit”).