cross

cross — verb

1. to travel to the opposite side of a road, bridge, or open space

1.動詞及物 / 不及物A2
釋義

to travel to the opposite side of a road, bridge, or open space

例句

Yael crossed the street to get to the bakery.

cross + noun phrase as direct object

The old stone bridge crosses the river at its narrowest point.

inanimate subject (bridge, road, line)

同義詞
  • traverse

    more formal; used for long distances or difficult terrain

  • go across

    more conversational; less direct than 'cross'

文法句型

cross + noun phrase as object

cross + adverb (over, across)

用法筆記

With a direct object, no preposition is needed: say 'cross the road' not 'cross over the road'. For the intransitive form, use 'across' or 'over' after the verb: 'They crossed over the bridge.'

常見錯誤

Please cross over the road carefully.
Please cross the road carefully.
💡'cross' is directly transitive for roads and streets; 'over' is unnecessary.

2. if a thought or idea suddenly enters your mind, especially briefly and unexpecte

2.動詞B2
釋義

if a thought or idea suddenly enters your mind, especially briefly and unexpectedly

例句

It never crossed Pim's mind to check the train schedule before leaving.

it + never + crosses + possessive + mind + to-infinitive

The thought of moving abroad crossed Anjali's mind several times last year.

thought/idea as subject

同義詞
  • occur to

    slightly more formal; 'it occurred to me that...'

  • come to mind

    less sudden; can be used for general recall

文法句型

something crosses someone's mind

it crosses someone's mind that...

it never crossed someone's mind to...

用法筆記

The subject of this expression is always an idea, thought, or 'it'. The person who has the thought is the object of the prepositional possessive: 'cross my mind', 'cross your mind', 'cross her mind'. Cannot be used in the passive voice.

常見錯誤

I crossed my mind to call you.
It crossed my mind to call you.
💡The thought is the subject, not the person.
A good idea was crossed in my mind.
A good idea crossed my mind.
💡This expression is never passive.

3. to place one arm, leg, or finger over the other, usually so that they form an X

3.動詞及物B1
釋義

to place one arm, leg, or finger over the other, usually so that they form an X shape

例句

Kwame crossed his legs and leaned back in the chair.

cross + body part (legs)

The teacher crossed her arms and waited for the class to quiet down.

cross + arms (often signals impatience)

同義詞
  • fold

    only for arms, not for legs or fingers; 'she folded her arms'

文法句型

cross + body part (arms, legs, fingers, ankles)

用法筆記

The direct object is typically a limb or finger belonging to the subject. Often used reflexively: the body part belongs to the person doing the crossing. Common in descriptions of posture ('arms crossed', 'legs crossed').

常見錯誤

She crossed her arms together.
She crossed her arms.
💡'together' is redundant because crossing already implies bringing two parts together.
He crossed his arms each other.
He crossed his arms.
💡'each other' is not used.

4. to make someone angry or upset by opposing their wishes, plans, or actions

4.動詞及物B2
釋義

to make someone angry or upset by opposing their wishes, plans, or actions

例句

Isabela did not want to cross her grandmother by refusing the homemade gift.

negative: don't want to cross someone

My brother crossed me by inviting people I did not like to the party.

cross + someone + by + gerund phrase

同義詞
  • oppose

    less emotional; focuses on disagreement rather than anger

  • defy

    stronger, suggests open resistance to authority

  • antagonize

    more formal; emphasizes making someone hostile

反義詞
  • please

    opposite effect — making someone happy by agreeing

文法句型

cross + someone

cross + someone + by + -ing phrase

用法筆記

The subject is a person whose action goes against someone else's wishes. The object is the person who is upset by this opposition. Often used in warnings and negative constructions ('don't cross me', 'be careful not to cross him').

常見錯誤

His rude words crossed me.
He crossed me with his rude words.
💡The person (not the words) is the subject of 'cross' in this sense.
I crossed him by being late.' (if lateness was an accident)
I crossed him by refusing to help.
💡'Cross' implies deliberate opposition, not accidental inconvenience.

5. to breed two separate kinds of plants or animals together so that they produce a

5.動詞及物B2
釋義

to breed two separate kinds of plants or animals together so that they produce a new combined variety

例句

Scientists crossed a lion with a tiger to produce a liger.

cross + A + with + B

The gardener crossed two types of roses to create a brighter red flower.

cross + noun phrase + to-infinitive (purpose)

同義詞
  • hybridize

    more technical; mainly scientific contexts

  • interbreed

    for animals; implies natural rather than human-controlled breeding

文法句型

cross + noun + with + noun

用法筆記

Frequently used in the pattern 'cross A with B' to specify the two parents of the hybrid. Common in both agriculture and scientific contexts. Can also be used intransitively in the passive: 'The two varieties were crossed.'

常見錯誤

The scientist crossed a lion and a tiger.
The scientist crossed a lion with a tiger.
💡Use 'with', not 'and', to connect the two parent types.
They crossed the flowers together.
They crossed the red flower with the white one.
💡Be specific about which two types are being crossed.

6. in soccer, rugby, ice hockey, and similar sports, to send a ball sideways from o

6.動詞及物 / 不及物B1
釋義

in soccer, rugby, ice hockey, and similar sports, to send a ball sideways from one side of the field to a teammate

例句

The midfielder crossed the ball into the penalty area from the right wing.

cross + ball + into + location

The winger crossed the ball low and fast toward the far post.

同義詞
  • center

    North American equivalent in soccer; 'to center the ball'

文法句型

cross + the ball/puck + to + someone

cross + the ball + into + location

用法筆記

In soccer and hockey, a cross is a sideways pass aimed toward the goal area, distinct from a forward pass or backward pass. The term is most common in British English sports commentary; American English may use 'center the ball' in soccer.

常見錯誤

He crossed the ball forwards.
He crossed the ball to the striker.
💡A cross travels sideways across the field, not forward.

7. to mark a cheque with two parallel lines so that the money is sent straight to t

7.動詞及物B2
釋義

to mark a cheque with two parallel lines so that the money is sent straight to the receiver's account through a bank, which makes the payment more secure than cashing it directly.

例句

Mathieu crossed the cheque before posting it to his supplier in Manchester.

cross + (the) cheque — UK banking practice

Banks in the UK will not cash a crossed cheque over the counter.

passive: crossed cheque as a noun phrase

文法句型

cross + noun phrase (cheque)

用法筆記

Only used for physical cheques (UK spelling). This is a standard banking-security practice in the UK and some other Commonwealth countries.

常見錯誤

Please cross the cheque at the till.
Please cross the cheque before mailing it.
💡Crossing is a preparation step done before sending, not a point-of-sale action.

8. to make the Christian symbol of a cross by moving your hand from your forehead d

8.動詞及物B2
釋義

to make the Christian symbol of a cross by moving your hand from your forehead down to your chest and then across to each shoulder, as a religious act of prayer or respect.

例句

As the church bells began to ring, Mira crossed herself and started to pray.

cross + reflexive pronoun (herself)

The old woman crossed herself slowly before stepping into the chapel.

同義詞

文法句型

cross + reflexive pronoun

用法筆記

Always used with a reflexive pronoun (myself, yourself, herself, etc.). Not used for other hand gestures or non-religious movements.

常見錯誤

She crossed herself when she saw the mouse.
She crossed herself when entering the church.
💡The sign of the cross is a religious gesture of faith or respect, not a reaction to surprise or fear.

9. If two roads, lines, or paths cross, they go over or across each other at a part

9.動詞不及物B1
釋義

If two roads, lines, or paths cross, they go over or across each other at a particular point, forming a shared meeting place.

例句

The two main roads cross just north of the old market square.

two things + cross + (at/near + place)

Draw two straight lines that cross at the centre of the page.

同義詞
  • intersect

    more formal; often used in mathematics or technical descriptions

  • meet

    common in everyday speech for roads or paths

  • converge

    suggests coming together at one point from different directions

反義詞
  • run parallel

    when two lines or roads stay the same distance apart and never meet

文法句型

two things + cross + (at/near + place)

用法筆記

Typically intransitive, with the two intersecting things as the subject. For the transitive use (e.g. 'the road crosses the river'), see sense 1 in the verb entry.

常見錯誤

The roads cross at 5 o'clock.
The roads cross near the river.
💡This sense refers to physical intersection of lines or routes, not to a scheduled meeting time.

10. to put a line or a mark such as an X through a written word or item, removing it

10.動詞及物B2
釋義

to put a line or a mark such as an X through a written word or item, removing it, cancelling it, or showing that it has been finished.

例句

Sahil crossed out the wrong answer and wrote the correct one beside it.

cross + out — cancelling written text

Please cross off the items that have already been delivered to the warehouse.

cross + off — removing from a list

同義詞
  • delete

    more general; can refer to removing digital or written content

  • strike through

    more formal; often used in editing or legal contexts

  • cancel

    broader meaning that includes non-written items like bookings

反義詞
  • keep

    to retain or not remove

  • preserve

    formal; keep something unchanged

文法句型

cross + noun phrase + out/off/through

用法筆記

Often used with the particle 'out' (cross out a mistake) or 'off' (cross off a list item). The meaning shifts slightly: 'out' focuses on deletion, while 'off' focuses on removal from a checklist.

常見錯誤

Please cross your name on the dotted line.
Please cross out the incorrect information and write the correction.
💡'Cross out' means to delete by drawing through; 'sign' or 'write' is the verb for putting your name on a document.

11. to encounter and go by another person, especially unexpectedly or without having

11.動詞不及物B2
釋義

to encounter and go by another person, especially unexpectedly or without having made a plan to meet.

例句

Ziad and Soraya first crossed paths at a conference in Tokyo.

cross paths with + someone — chance encounter

Our paths crossed again years later at a small bookshop in Lisbon.

paths cross — alternative word order

同義詞
  • meet (by chance)

    simpler and more common; 'cross paths' adds a sense of unexpectedness

  • encounter

    more formal; can be planned or unplanned

  • run into

    informal; for unexpected meetings with people

反義詞
  • miss

    to fail to meet someone

  • avoid

    to deliberately stay away from someone

文法句型

paths cross

cross paths with + someone

用法筆記

Most common in the fixed expressions 'cross paths' and 'paths cross'. When used without these set phrases, the meaning is literal physical passing rather than a chance meeting.

常見錯誤

I crossed the bus on my way to work.
My path crossed with the bus driver's when we both stopped at the same cafe.
💡For chance meetings with people, use 'cross paths' rather than 'cross' alone with a direct object.

cross — noun

cross — adjective

cross — prefix