press

press — verb

1. to use your hand, finger, or body to apply steady force against something, usual

1.動詞及物 / 不及物B1
釋義

to use your hand, finger, or body to apply steady force against something, usually without moving it from its original position

例句

Kevin pressed his nose against the train window and waved goodbye.

transitive + against [surface]

Iker pressed the doorbell but nobody came to open the door.

同義詞
  • push

    push often implies moving something away; press suggests firm contact without necessarily moving

  • squeeze

    squeeze involves pressing from multiple sides at once

  • compress

    compress is more formal and suggests reducing the space something occupies

反義詞

文法句型

press + against / down / forward / through

常見錯誤

I pressed at the button many times.
I pressed the button many times.
💡press is usually transitive; no preposition needed when the object is directly specified.
He pressed me to the wall with his hand.' (when no movement is implied)
He pressed his hand against the wall.
💡press + against describes contact without permanent movement.

2. to run a heated iron over clothes or fabric so that the material becomes flat an

2.動詞及物B1
釋義

to run a heated iron over clothes or fabric so that the material becomes flat and neat

例句

Hoa pressed her school uniform before the graduation ceremony.

transitive; object is an item of clothing

The laundry service pressed all the shirts and hung them on padded hangers.

同義詞
  • iron

    iron is the more common word in American English; press is slightly more formal

文法句型

press + clothing item

用法筆記

In British English, press is the usual verb for ironing clothes. In American English, iron is more common, though press is still understood.

常見錯誤

I pressed my shirt in the washing machine.
I pressed my shirt with an iron.
💡press (clothes) specifically means using a heated iron, not the washing machine.

3. to crush fruit, vegetables, or other soft produce with weight or pressure so tha

3.動詞及物B1
釋義

to crush fruit, vegetables, or other soft produce with weight or pressure so that the liquid comes out

例句

The farm workers pressed the grapes with their feet to make wine.

object is fruit; traditional method

Heloísa pressed the oranges by hand to make fresh juice for breakfast.

同義詞
  • squeeze

    squeeze is more general and can be done by hand; press often implies using a tool or machine

  • crush

    crush suggests breaking the structure more completely than press

文法句型

press + fruit / vegetable

4. to shape a flat object such as a CD, DVD, or record by putting soft material int

4.動詞及物B2
釋義

to shape a flat object such as a CD, DVD, or record by putting soft material into a mould and applying strong pressure

例句

The factory pressed thousands of vinyl records each week for music labels.

object is a disc or record

Chidi's band pressed their first album from a master recording.

同義詞
  • manufacture

    manufacture is a broader term for making any product; press is specific to moulding with pressure

  • stamp

    stamp is used for pressing designs into a surface rather than shaping an entire object

文法句型

press + [disc / record / CD]

5. to put something between two hard surfaces or under a weight so that it becomes

5.動詞及物B1
釋義

to put something between two hard surfaces or under a weight so that it becomes flat, thin, or compact

例句

Reuben pressed the dried flowers between the pages of a heavy book.

collocation: press + between [surfaces]

Ilan pressed the soil down around the plant with both hands.

同義詞
  • flatten

    flatten describes the result; press describes the action

  • compress

    compress is more technical and suggests reducing volume

文法句型

press + [object] + under / between

6. to keep asking someone in a forceful or determined way to do something that they

6.動詞及物C2
釋義

to keep asking someone in a forceful or determined way to do something that they are unwilling or hesitant to do

例句

The charity worker pressed the politician to visit the refugee camp.

pattern: press + someone + to-infinitive

Hugo's parents pressed him to apply for medical school, but he refused.

同義詞
  • urge

    urge is less forceful than press and often carries encouragement rather than insistence

  • push

    push is more informal and can feel less persistent than press

  • pressure

    pressure as a verb is more direct and can be negative; press can be neutral or persistent

反義詞
  • discourage

    to try to persuade someone not to do something

文法句型

press + [someone] + to + [verb]

用法筆記

Frequently used in journalism and negotiation contexts. The pattern press + someone + for + something asks for information or a decision rather than action.

常見錯誤

I pressed that she should come to the party.
I pressed her to come to the party.
💡press requires an object before the to-infinitive; it cannot take a that-clause.

7. to make a formal statement that someone has broken the law, asking for them to b

7.動詞不及物C2
釋義

to make a formal statement that someone has broken the law, asking for them to be judged in a court of law

例句

The victim's family decided not to press charges against the driver.

press + charges + against + person

After finding clear evidence of theft, Liang pressed charges against his former business partner.

同義詞
  • prosecute

    more formal; describes the official legal process rather than the act of starting it

  • sue

    different legal context — suing is for civil cases, pressing charges is for criminal ones

反義詞
  • drop charges

    withdrawing a legal accusation that was already made

文法句型

press + charges + against + somebody

用法筆記

Used almost exclusively in the fixed collocation 'press charges'. Always followed by 'against [the accused person]' when the target is named.

常見錯誤

She pressed charges for the stolen laptop.
She pressed charges against the man who stole her laptop.
💡'press charges' requires a person (with 'against'), not an object (with 'for').

8. to keep asking for something in a forceful and determined way, insisting that ot

8.動詞及物 / 不及物B2
釋義

to keep asking for something in a forceful and determined way, insisting that others agree to your requests or conditions

例句

Union leaders pressed for higher wages during the long negotiations.

press + for + [demand]

Adina pressed her parents on whether they would allow her to study abroad.

同義詞
  • push

    more informal and broader — 'push' can mean any kind of urging, while 'press' implies stronger insistence

  • urge

    less forceful; 'urge' emphasises recommendation, 'press' emphasises persistent demand

  • insist

    focuses on refusing to accept refusal, used with 'on' rather than 'for'

反義詞
  • withdraw

    to take back a demand or request

  • relent

    to agree to something after originally refusing

文法句型

press + for + something

press + somebody + on/about + something

press + somebody + to-infinitive

用法筆記

Commonly appears with prepositions 'for' (to demand something) or 'on/about' (to question someone persistently). Different from sense 6 (PERSUADE) in that this sense focuses on driving an agenda or set of demands, while sense 6 is about convincing someone to perform a specific action.

常見錯誤

The activists pressed the government to stop deforestation and also demanded more funding.
The activists pressed the government to take stronger action on deforestation.
💡this sense works best with a single clear demand; avoid listing multiple goals.
I pressed my brother to come to the party.
I pressed my brother to tell me what happened.
💡when used transitively, the object is usually information, a decision, or a concession, not a social invitation.

press — noun