baton

baton — 名詞

1. a slim, light wooden stick that the person leading an orchestra, band, or choir

1.名詞B2
釋義

指揮棒

樂團指揮用來打拍子的細長木棒

a slim, light wooden stick that the person leading an orchestra, band, or choir holds in one hand and waves through the air to set the speed and feeling of the music being played.

例句

Maestro Abreu raised his baton, and the violins began the slow opening melody.

Abreu 大師舉起指揮棒,小提琴開始演奏緩慢的開場旋律。

subject is a conductor; verb 'raise' typical with baton

The young conductor held her baton lightly between her thumb and first finger.

那位年輕的女指揮輕輕用大拇指和食指夾著指揮棒。

collocation: hold + baton

同義詞
  • stick

    general word; 'baton' is the specific term for orchestral conducting

用法筆記

Subject is usually a conductor or musical leader; common verbs are 'raise', 'lower', 'wave', and 'tap with'. Distinguish from sense 2: this baton stays in one person's hand throughout the performance.

常見錯誤

The conductor played his baton.
The conductor waved his baton.
💡a baton is not played; it is waved or raised to direct.

2. a short tube or stick used in a running race for teams, where each member of the

2.名詞B2
釋義

接力棒

接力賽中跑者交給下一棒的短棒

a short tube or stick used in a running race for teams, where each member of the team carries it for one section of the course and then hands it to the next teammate.

例句

Theo dropped the baton just before reaching her teammate, and Japan lost the lead.

Theo 在快要碰到隊友前掉了接力棒,日本隊因此失去領先。

verb 'drop' is the classic relay-race collocation

The American team practised passing the baton smoothly for hours every morning.

美國隊每天早上都花好幾個小時練習順利交出接力棒。

collocation: pass the baton

用法筆記

Most often used with the verbs 'pass', 'hand', 'drop', and 'grab'. The phrase 'pass the baton' is also a common idiom (see idioms section) meaning to transfer responsibility to another person.

常見錯誤

She gave the baton to the next runner.
She passed the baton to the next runner.
💡'pass' is the standard sports verb; 'give' sounds odd in relay-race contexts.

3. a long, hollow metal rod, often with weighted ends, that a marching-band leader

3.名詞C1
釋義

花式指揮棒

遊行隊伍的指揮或女領隊旋轉拋接的金屬長棒

a long, hollow metal rod, often with weighted ends, that a marching-band leader or majorette spins quickly between her fingers and tosses high into the air during a parade or show.

例句

The majorette spun her baton above her head as the marching band turned the corner.

在樂隊轉彎時,那位女領隊在頭頂上方旋轉著她的指揮杖。

collocation: spin / twirl + baton

Priya tossed her baton ten feet in the air and caught it without missing a step.

Priya 把花式棒拋到三公尺高,落下時剛好接住,腳步完全沒有亂掉。

phrase: toss + baton in the air

用法筆記

Object of 'twirl', 'spin', 'toss', or 'flourish'. Usually appears with parade, marching-band, or majorette contexts; out of those settings, sense 2 (relay) or sense 1 (conductor) is more likely.

4. a heavy wooden or rubber stick that a police officer carries on a belt and uses

4.名詞B2
釋義

警棍

警察隨身攜帶的硬棒,用來自衛或鎮壓

a heavy wooden or rubber stick that a police officer carries on a belt and uses to defend themselves or to hit and control people during a fight or protest.

例句

The officer pulled his baton from his belt and shouted at the crowd to step back.

那名警員從腰帶抽出警棍,對群眾大喊要他們退後。

collocation: pull / draw + baton

Riot police charged forward with shields raised and batons in their hands.

鎮暴警察舉起盾牌、手持警棍向前推進。

common in protest / riot reporting

同義詞
  • truncheon

    British equivalent, slightly more formal

  • nightstick

    American, mainly for police

  • club

    general word for any heavy short stick used as a weapon

用法筆記

Often appears in news reports about protests, riots, or arrests. American English also uses 'nightstick' or 'club'; British English may use 'truncheon'. In modern policing, 'extendable baton' refers to a metal version that opens with a flick.

常見錯誤

The officer shot the suspect with his baton.
The officer struck the suspect with his baton.
💡a baton is for hitting, not shooting.

5. a short, decorated rod that an officer or official holds during ceremonies as a

5.名詞C1
釋義

權杖

象徵官階或權力的禮儀短杖

a short, decorated rod that an officer or official holds during ceremonies as a public sign of the rank or authority that has been given to them.

例句

Field Marshal Chen received a gold baton from the queen at the palace ceremony.

Chen 元帥在皇宮的典禮上從女王手中接下了一根金色權杖。

ceremonial / military register

The general carried an ivory baton tipped with silver as a sign of his new rank.

那位將軍手持一根頂端鑲銀的象牙權杖,作為新軍階的象徵。

同義詞
  • staff

    longer ceremonial rod, often religious or royal

  • mace

    ornamental staff carried by officials in parliaments and universities

用法筆記

Almost always paired with a modifier such as 'ceremonial', 'gold', 'ivory', or with a rank like 'field marshal's'. Distinct from sense 4 (which is a working weapon) — this baton is purely symbolic and is rarely, if ever, used to strike anyone.

baton — 動詞