0 a small amount of money that you have to pay to use a road, cross a bridge, etc. -- (道路、桥梁等的)通行费
1 suffering, deaths, or damage -- 伤亡;损失;破坏
Independent sources say that the death toll from the earthquake runs into thousands. 独立消息人士称地震中的伤亡人数达到数千人。
2 to (cause a large bell to) ring slowly and repeatedly -- (使)缓慢而反复地鸣响
The toll of bankruptcies was rising daily.
The expected death tolls of these projects can therefore be entered into the analysis.
The latter feature deals critically with the alleged demise of whom ('the bell tolls for whom') and the spread of the genitive, a reversal of expected tendencies.
Private ownership of lighthouses, which had existed for centuries, came under increasing attack, due to the burdens high tolls and decentralized management were said to impose on the public.
Though tolls sometimes involved the royal right of pre-emption, and probably levies in kind on ships' cargoes, money must have been for all parties a more convenient medium for payment.
From the king's standpoint money tolls gave access to the silver bullion on which royal power partly depended without putting him to the trouble of fighting for it.
The eight-minute second movement, marked = c. 48, opens with a brief solo elegy from the violin, which is soon joined by tolling piano chords which roll into a bluesy nightscape.
中文繁体
收費, (道路、橋梁等的)通行費, 長途電話費…
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peaje, tarifa interurbana, precio…
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pedágio, portagem, tarifa interurbana…
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(köprü, yol vb.) geçiş/giriş ücreti, (yaralı…
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nombre [masculine] de (victimes), bilan [masculine], péage [masculine]…
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vyzvánět, mýto, mostné…
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ringe, bompenge, betalings-…
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membunyikan lonceng, pajak, kerugian…
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