somewhere
adv. 某處,在某處; 在[到]某處; 不知道在[到]什麼地方; 某地
You use somewhere to refer to a place without saying exactly where you mean.
I've got a feeling I've seen him before somewhere...
我有種感覺——我以前曾在哪裡見過他。
I'm not going home yet. I have to go somewhere else first...
我還不準備回家,我要先去別的地方。
You use somewhere when giving an approximate amount, number, or time.
The Queen is believed to earn somewhere between seven million and one hundred million pounds...
據說女王的收入大約在 700 萬至 1 億英鎊之間。
Caray is somewhere between 73 and 80 years of age...
卡瑞的年紀在 73 到 80 歲之間。
If you say that you are getting somewhere, you mean that you are making progress towards achieving something.
At last they were agreeing, at last they were getting somewhere...
他們最終逐漸達成共識,終於取得了一些進展。
This time it looks as if we're really going to get somewhere.
這一次,我們似乎真的要取得進展了。
1. an indefinite or unknown location;
1. in or at or to some place;
get somewhere
(非正式)進步;取得成功
He lives somewhere about here.
他住在附近.
The post office is somewhere around there.
郵局就在那一溜兒.
I am sure you can fit me in somewhere.
我相信你能找個地方安排我.
The troops have been sent to somewhere at the front.
部隊被派到前線某地去了.
There should be some envelopes floating around somewhere.
我這裡應該有些信封.