rover
rover — noun
1. someone who enjoys moving between different places and does not stay in one loca
someone who enjoys moving between different places and does not stay in one location for long
After years as a rover, Meera finally settled in a small coastal town.
contrast: rover + settle
The old rover Quinn told stories of deserts he had crossed in his youth.
Eli's restless spirit made him a rover who stayed nowhere for more than a season.
A rover's life sounds romantic, but Antonia found the constant moving exhausting.
Hiro the rover packed his tent at dawn and set off toward the distant hills.
- settler
someone who stays in one place permanently
文法句型
a + rover
用法筆記
This sense appears most often in literary or descriptive writing. A rover differs from a tourist in that roving implies a long-term lifestyle, not a planned trip with a return date.
常見錯誤
2. a wheeled machine designed to travel across uneven ground, especially one sent t
a wheeled machine designed to travel across uneven ground, especially one sent to explore the surface of planets or moons beyond Earth
The rover sent back images of rocks and dust from the surface of Mars.
rover + send back images [of planet surface]
Engineers in Tokyo designed a new rover that could climb steep slopes on the Moon.
A small rover equipped with cameras explored a cave on the asteroid Bennu.
The rover's wheels had to survive extreme cold and sharp rocks on Mars.
After a safe landing, the rover slowly moved across the red plain.
- planetary vehicle
broader term; less specific than rover, includes stationary landers
- exploration vehicle
functional description rather than a standard term
文法句型
a + rover
the + planet name + rover
用法筆記
In modern English this sense is most commonly associated with planetary exploration — Mars rovers such as Perseverance and Curiosity are the best-known examples. The term can also refer to similar vehicles used on the Moon or asteroids.