fail
英 [feɪl]
美[fel]
	    - vi. 失败,不及格;破产;缺乏;衰退
 - vt. 不及格;使失望;忘记;舍弃
 - n. 不及格
 - n. (Fail)人名;(葡、捷)法伊尔;(法)法伊
 
英英释意
- 1. fail to do something; leave something undone;
 - "She failed to notice that her child was no longer in his crib"
 - "The secretary failed to call the customer and the company lost the account"
 
- 2. be unsuccessful;
 - "Where do today's public schools fail?"
 - "The attempt to rescue the hostages failed miserably"
 
- 3. disappoint, prove undependable to; abandon, forsake;
 - "His sense of smell failed him this time"
 - "His strength finally failed him"
 - "His children failed him in the crisis"
 
- 4. stop operating or functioning;
 - "The engine finally went"
 - "The car died on the road"
 - "The bus we travelled in broke down on the way to town"
 - "The coffee maker broke"
 - "The engine failed on the way to town"
 - "her eyesight went after the accident"
 
- 5. be unable;
 - "I fail to understand your motives"
 
- 6. judge unacceptable;
 - "The teacher failed six students"
 
- 7. fail to get a passing grade;
 - "She studied hard but failed nevertheless"
 - "Did I fail the test?"
 
- 8. fall short in what is expected;
 - "She failed in her obligations as a good daughter-in-law"
 - "We must not fail his obligation to the victims of the Holocaust"
 
- 9. become bankrupt or insolvent; fail financially and close;
 - "The toy company went bankrupt after the competition hired cheap Mexican labor"
 - "A number of banks failed that year"
 
- 10. prove insufficient;
 - "The water supply for the town failed after a long drought"
 
- 11. get worse;
 - "Her health is declining"