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TOEFL IELTS BNC: 1972 COCA: 2236

mine

1 mine /ˈmaɪn/ pronoun
1 mine
/ˈmaɪn/
pronoun
Learner's definition of MINE
: that which belongs to me : my one : my ones我的;属于我的
British, informal : my home : my place我的家
2 mine /ˈmaɪn/ noun
plural mines
2 mine
/ˈmaɪn/
noun
plural mines
Learner's definition of MINE
[count]
: a pit or tunnel from which minerals (such as coal, gold, diamonds, etc.) are taken矿井;矿 see also gold mine, strip mine
: a bomb that is placed in the ground or in water and that explodes when it is touched地雷;水雷 see also land mine
: a rich source of something (such as information)宝库;源泉
3 mine /ˈmaɪn/ verb
mines; mined; mining
3 mine
/ˈmaɪn/
verb
mines; mined; mining
Learner's definition of MINE
: to dig a mine in order to find and take away coal, gold, diamonds, etc.开矿;挖矿usually + for
[no object]
[+ object]
[+ object] : to find and take away (coal, gold, diamonds, etc.) from a mine采矿
[+ object] : to search for something valuable in (something)寻找(某事物中)蕴含的价值usually + for
[+ object] : to put mines (sense 2) in or under (something)在…布雷
TOEFL IELTS BNC: 1972 COCA: 2236

mine

1 of 4

adjective

: my
used before a word beginning with a vowel or h
this treasure in mine arms William Shakespeare
or sometimes as a modifier of a preceding noun
archaic except in an elevated style

mine

2 of 4

pronoun

singular or plural in construction
: that which belongs to me
used without a following noun as a pronoun equivalent in meaning to the adjective my
Your eyes are brown and mine are green.

mine

3 of 4

noun

1
a
: a pit or excavation in the earth from which mineral substances are taken
b
: an ore deposit
2
: a subterranean passage under an enemy position
3
: an encased explosive that is placed in the ground or in water and set to explode when disturbed
4
: a rich source of supply

mine

4 of 4

verb

mined; mining

transitive verb

1
a
: to dig under to gain access or cause the collapse of (an enemy position)
b
2
a
: to get (something, such as ore) from the earth
b
: to extract from a source
information mined from the files
3
: to burrow beneath the surface of
larva that mines leaves
4
: to place military mines in, on, or under
mine a harbor
5
a
: to dig into for ore or metal
b
: to process for obtaining a natural constituent
mine the air for nitrogen
c
: to seek valuable material in
mine old records for more details
6
: to create or obtain more units of (a cryptocurrency) through a cryptographic process
But bitcoins also need to be generated in the first place. Bitcoins are "mined" when you set your Bitcoin client to a mode that has it compete to update the public log of transactions. All the clients set to this mode race to solve a cryptographic puzzle by completing the next "block" of the shared transaction log. Winning the race to complete the next block wins you a 50-Bitcoin prize. Tom Simonite

intransitive verb

: to dig a mine
miner noun

Example Sentences

Noun a baseball fanatic who is a mine of fascinating trivia about the game the soldiers were careful to disarm any mines they found in their path Verb The area was soon filled with prospectors who were mining for gold. Prospectors mined the region for diamonds. Local people were hired to mine the gold. The enemy had mined the harbor. See More
Recent Examples on the Web
Noun
Travel is a big hobby of mine, and has become one for my family. Linda Chase, Sun Sentinel, 15 Sep. 2022 This is constantly happening with a relative of mine. Jacobina Martin, Washington Post, 14 Sep. 2022 Having the legendary Greg Kurstin produce any song of mine is always a dream come true. Daniel Kreps, Rolling Stone, 14 Sep. 2022 One is a sense that friends of mine have that our reality is doctored. Deborah Treisman, The New Yorker, 12 Sep. 2022 Compared to other works of mine, this body of work exists as fragments, rather than one single narrative line. Rica Cerbarano, Vogue, 9 Sep. 2022 While at a get-together with old friends of mine, one of them waited until RJ went to the bathroom to ask me about my ex-husband and his well-being. Amy Dickinson, Detroit Free Press, 8 Sep. 2022 Even with so much going on, all eyes were on the clothes (including Janet Jackson’s—an icon and personal favorite of mine). Remi Bader, ELLE, 8 Sep. 2022 While at a get-together with old friends of mine, one of them waited until RJ went to the bathroom to ask me about my ex-husband and his well-being. Amy Dickinson, BostonGlobe.com, 8 Sep. 2022
Verb
This is a weird and wonderfully expansive story, adroitly executed by Morosini with the compassion to mine it for humanism rather than droll, oddball quirk. Ann Hornaday, Washington Post, 2 Aug. 2022 In 1989 Paul Jensen brought sediments from the Bahamian seafloor back to his lab at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography to mine them for medically useful bacteria. Stephanie Stone, Scientific American, 23 July 2022 To mine those environments for humor was important to me to keep the reader engaged and entertained. Michelle Ruiz, Vogue, 18 Aug. 2022 For Bitcoin miners, which can power on and off operations with the flip of a switch, taking ERCOT’s payout rather than continuing to mine Bitcoin during times of tight power supply makes a lot of sense. Eamon Barrett, Fortune, 12 July 2022 Meanwhile, the switch to proof-of-stake will affect thousands of people who mine Ether, many of whom have expended significant capital on the endeavor. Taylor Locke, Fortune, 19 Aug. 2022 Instead, MiamiCoin has primarily served as a volatile asset that makes money for the city government based on its value among investors who mine and trade it on the crypto market. Scott Nover, Quartz, 16 May 2022 Instead of investing in bullion or futures, an investor can purchase the shares of companies that mine and produce gold and perhaps other metals. Bob Carlson, Forbes, 20 Jan. 2022 But aside from the rare battle between Bennets and the undead, Austen's stories mine narrative riches out of relatively mundane goings-on at English manors, among members of a few local families. Scottie Andrew, CNN, 7 Aug. 2022 See More

Word History

Etymology

Adjective and Pronoun

Middle English min, from Old English mīn — more at my

Noun

Middle English, from Anglo-French, from Vulgar Latin *mina, probably of Celtic origin; akin to Welsh mwyn ore

First Known Use

Adjective

before the 12th century, in the meaning defined above

Pronoun

before the 12th century, in the meaning defined above

Noun

14th century, in the meaning defined at sense 1a

Verb

14th century, in the meaning defined at transitive sense 1a

Time Traveler
The first known use of mine was before the 12th century
TOEFL IELTS BNC: 1972 COCA: 2236
mine

noun¹

1for coal, etc.ADJECTIVE | VERB + MINE | MINE + VERB | MINE + NOUN | PREPOSITION ADJECTIVEcoal, copper, diamond, salt, tin, etc.煤礦、銅礦、金剛石礦、鹽礦、錫礦等deep, drift, opencast, open-pit, strip, underground深礦;平巷礦;露天礦;地下礦abandoned, disused廢棄礦山/礦井VERB + MINEoperate, run, work經營礦山/礦井;採礦MINE + VERBproduce sth礦山生產⋯At its peak, the mine produced 5 000 tons of coal a day.鼎盛時期,這個煤礦一天產 5,000 噸煤。MINE + NOUNshaft (usually mineshaft) , workings礦井;礦山井巷flooded mine workings水淹的井巷owner礦主PREPOSITIONat a/the mine, down a/the mine, in a/the mine在礦上;下礦;在礦山裏At 14, he went down the mines.他 14 歲時就下礦了。poor working conditions in the mines礦井裏惡劣的工作條件
mine

noun²

2explosive device爆炸裝置ADJECTIVE | VERB + MINE | MINE + VERB ADJECTIVEanti-personnel, anti-tank, land, limpet (especially BrE) 殺傷人員地雷;反坦克地雷;地雷;水下爆破彈VERB + MINEbury, lay, plant埋雷;布雷Soldiers laid anti-personnel mines in the fields.士兵們在戰場上佈設了殺傷人員地雷。detect, locate發現/定位地雷clear, dispose of, remove掃雷;清除地雷The troops are slowly clearing the mines.部隊正在慢慢地掃雷。detonate, hit, set off, strike引爆地雷;觸雷MINE + VERBblow up, explode, go off地雷爆炸

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