uniformed
uniformed — 形容詞
1. dressed in the special outfit that identifies someone as a member of a particula
穿制服的
穿著制服
dressed in the special outfit that identifies someone as a member of a particular profession, organization, or group
A uniformed police officer stood at the entrance to the train station.
一名身穿制服的警察站在火車站入口處。
uniformed + [job title] (attributive)
Two uniformed security guards patrol the museum every hour.
兩名穿制服的警衛每小時巡邏博物館一次。
uniformed + [role] (attributive)
The nurses on that floor are all uniformed in light blue scrubs.
那層樓的護士全都穿著淺藍色的制服。
Ryo felt safe when he saw the uniformed airport staff near the gate.
Ryo 看到登機門附近有穿制服的機場工作人員,覺得很安心。
The parade featured uniformed schoolchildren marching with their band.
遊行隊伍中有穿著制服的學童跟著樂隊行進。
- dressed in uniform
more verbose and typically used predicatively ('The guards were dressed in uniform.')
- in uniform
common in predicative position ('The soldiers were in uniform.'); less natural attributively
- civilian
describes a person who is not a member of the military or police and does not wear a uniform
- plain-clothes
describes police officers wearing ordinary clothes rather than a uniform
文法句型
uniformed + noun (person's role/profession)
be + uniformed
用法筆記
This adjective is most commonly used attributively before a noun that names a person's job or role (e.g. uniformed officer, uniformed guard). When used predicatively, it is often followed by a phrase describing the specific clothing, as in 'uniformed in white shirts'. Compare with the adjective 'civilian', which describes people not in uniform.