SCRAMBLE


Meaning of SCRAMBLE in English

I. scram ‧ ble 1 /ˈskræmb ə l/ BrE AmE verb

[ Date: 1500-1600 ; Origin: Perhaps from scrabble ]

1 . CLIMB [intransitive always + adverb/preposition] to climb up, down, or over something quickly and with difficulty, especially using your hands to help you

scramble up/down/over etc

They tried to scramble up the cliff.

She scrambled down the tree as quickly as she could.

2 . MOVE QUICKLY [intransitive always + adverb/preposition] to move somewhere in a hurried awkward way

scramble to/out/from etc

Alan scrambled out of the way.

Micky scrambled to his feet (=stood up very quickly and awkwardly) and hurried into the kitchen.

3 . DO SOMETHING QUICKLY [transitive] to try to do something difficult very quickly

scramble to do something

They were scrambling to give the impression that the situation was under control.

4 . COMPETE [intransitive] to struggle or compete with other people to get or reach something

scramble for

Thousands of people will be scrambling for tickets.

5 . INFORMATION/MESSAGE [transitive] to use special equipment to mix messages, radio signals etc into a different form, so that they cannot be understood by other people without the correct equipment:

Our conversation will be electronically scrambled.

6 . MIX [transitive] to mix words, ideas, sentences etc so that they are not in the right order and do not make sense:

The words in each sentence are scrambled.

7 . scramble an egg to cook an egg by mixing the white and yellow parts together and heating it in a pan

8 . scramble sb’s brains informal to make someone unable to think clearly or reasonably:

Maybe the alcohol has scrambled his brains.

9 . AIRCRAFT [intransitive] if a military plane scrambles, it goes up into the air very quickly in order to escape or to attack an enemy

• • •

THESAURUS

▪ climb to move up, down, or across something using your hands and feet:

Most kids love climbing trees.

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Several fans climbed onto the roof of the arena to get a better view.

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She climbed down the ladder.

▪ ascend formal to climb up something:

He began to ascend the narrow winding staircase.

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the first man to ascend Mount Everest

▪ go up to climb up something such as a slope or stairs:

He went up the steps to the platform.

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Sonia was quiet as they went up the hill.

▪ scale formal to climb to the top of something such as a high wall or ↑ fence :

Somehow the men had scaled the twenty-foot wall without setting off the alarm.

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Protestors scaled the walls of the building and hung banners.

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Rescuers had to scale a one-thousand-foot cliff before they could reach the injured climber.

▪ clamber to climb somewhere with difficulty, using your hands to help you:

At last we saw the two girls clambering down the slope to safety.

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Everyone clambered onto the back of the truck.

▪ scramble to climb somewhere quickly and with difficulty, using your hands to help you, especially when you are walking:

They scrambled up the steep rocky bank.

II. scramble 2 BrE AmE noun

1 . [singular] a difficult climb in which you have to use your hands to help you:

The village was a 20-minute scramble away.

2 . [singular] a situation in which people compete with and push each other in order to get what they want

scramble for

the usual scramble for the bathroom every morning

scramble to do something

a scramble to carry the baggage into the house

3 . [singular] a situation in which something has to be done very quickly, with a lot of rushing around:

It was a mad scramble trying to get things ready in time.

4 . [countable] British English a ↑ motorcycle race over rough ground

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English.      Longman - Словарь современного английского языка.