avert
avert — verb
1. to stop a dangerous, harmful, or unwanted event before it actually happens, ofte
to stop a dangerous, harmful, or unwanted event before it actually happens, often by acting just in time.
Quick action by the pilot averted a serious crash near the runway.
avert + noun (event); subject often performs the saving action
The new safety rules helped avert hundreds of factory accidents last year.
avert + plural noun for repeated prevented events
Diplomats worked through the night to avert war between the two countries.
A last-minute loan from the government averted the bank's collapse.
Only careful planning by Amara's team averted a public health crisis in the city.
- prevent
everyday and neutral; 'avert' is more formal and suggests last-minute rescue
- avoid
broader; can mean stay away from something, while 'avert' is specifically about heading off a bad outcome
- forestall
very formal; emphasises acting first to block another's plan or a likely event
- stave off
informal; often used for hunger, illness, or unwanted events kept back temporarily
文法句型
avert + noun (disaster, crisis, war, accident)
用法筆記
Object must be something unwanted (disaster, crisis, strike, war, collapse). Subject is usually a person, group, or action that intervenes in time. Frequently appears with adverbs of timing such as 'narrowly', 'just', or 'barely'.
常見錯誤
2. to move your eyes, face, or attention so that you are no longer looking at someo
to move your eyes, face, or attention so that you are no longer looking at someone or something, usually because the sight upsets, embarrasses, or disturbs you.
Vesna averted her eyes when the nurse pulled the bandage off the wound.
avert + possessive + eyes; reaction to an unpleasant sight
Beatriz averted her gaze from the crash scene as the police walked by.
avert + gaze for a more formal, literary tone
The little boy averted his face and hid behind his mother in the doctor's office.
Many readers averted their eyes from the photo on the front page.
Out of respect, the villagers averted their gaze as the funeral car passed.
文法句型
avert + one's eyes / gaze / face
用法筆記
Object is almost always 'eyes', 'gaze', 'face', or sometimes 'thoughts'. Distinguish from sense 1: this sense is a small physical or mental movement, not stopping a future event. Common in literary or formal writing rather than everyday speech.