[mə'ruːnd]
marooned如何读
marooned是什么意思
- 褐红色的
- 褐紫红色的
- 紫褐色的
- 栗色的
- 酱紫色的
- 鞭炮
- 被放逐到孤岛的人
- 褐红色
- 褐紫红色
- 逃亡黑奴
- 孤立无援的人
- 栗色
- 紫褐色
- 避居西印度群岛及圭亚那山中的黑人
- 酱紫色
- 纸炮烟火
- 流放
- 把…放逐到孤岛
- 使孤立无援
- 带帐篷旅行
- 闯荡
- 闲逛
- 困住
- 使无法逃脱
- 闲荡
- 吊儿郎当地过日子
- 从奴役下逃亡
- 使(人)处于孤独无助之境
marooned英英释义
noun (1)
a dark red
verb
transitive verb
to put ashore on a desolate island or coast and leave to one's fate
to place or leave in isolation or without hope of ready escape
noun (2)
a person who is marooned
maroon or Maroon a Black person of the Americas who escaped slavery and formed or joined a free and often secluded settlement or a descendant of such a person From the late 17th century to the end of the [U.S.] Civil War, thousands of maroons—runaways who obtained their freedom by occupying remote and uninhabited regions—lived in relative secrecy throughout the 750-square-mile wilderness.—Lex Pryorespecially, usually Maroon: a maroon of the West Indies or Guiana in the 17th and 18th centuries or a descendant of such a person In the eighteenth century, a number of Africans … who had been enslaved on plantations in French Guiana and Suriname escaped their forced labor and gathered in groups in the forests between colonial settlements. There these rebels, called Maroons, built their own communities. … Today, Maroons are still living where their ancestors literally cleared paths … —Hilton Als Decades before, in 1796, the diaspora began setting down roots in Canada when 600 Jamaican Maroons (the descendants of enslaved people who had escaped) were deported from Jamaica to Nova Scotia. —Danica Samuel
Wherever Africans were enslaved in the world, there were runaways who escaped permanently and lived in free independent settlements. These people and their descendants are known as "maroons."—Richard Grant
marooned词源英文解释
Noun (1) French marron Spanish chestnut Noun (2) probably from French maron, marron feral, fugitive, modification of American Spanish cimarrón wild, savage
The first known use of maroon was in 1666
marooned儿童词典英英释义
marquisettenoun
a sheer meshed fabric used for clothing, curtains, and mosquito nets
marquisenoun
marchioness
marquisnoun
marquess sense 2
marquessnoun
a nobleman of hereditary rank in Europe and Japan
a British nobleman ranking below a duke and above an earl
marqueenoun
a large tent set up for an outdoor party or exhibition
a rooflike structure sticking out over an entrance
a theater marquee
maroon1 of 2verb
to put ashore and abandon on a lonely island or coast
to leave isolated and helpless
maroon2 of 2noun
a dark red
marooned 例句
1 He was put in touch with Louisa Walker, now 47, who inspired the characters of Tessa and Dean, a young couple marooned at the shelter with Dean’s children.
2 Motion has added a lofty moral mission that transcends mere greed: the liberation of a pathetic group of slaves who are victims of the marooned pirates' debauchery and brutality.
3 They tell of soldiers housed at the castle, a prisoner’s execution and more modern stories from the military children who were marooned here with the Coast Guard.
4 George Clooney returns, setting aside the warm and witty persona that his fans love, and giving them instead one of his darkest and most unsympathetic characters: an ice-cold professional killer marooned in loneliness and fear.
5 After watching Cracked Actor, the director Nic Roeg cast Bowie as an extraterrestrial marooned in America, in his film The Man Who Fell to Earth.
6 Just as “desert-island discs” are the can’t-live-without-‘em records that you couldn’t actually listen to if marooned on an island without electricity, a “B-side book” is a nonsensical but diverting concept.
7 It was a Robinson Crusoe story about seven disparate travelers who are marooned on a deserted Pacific Island after their small boat wrecks in a storm.
8 It really does rattle along, and Ramírez is a very convincing Carlos: on the run like a bank robber, an ideologue with no ideas, left marooned when the tides of history turn against him.
9 The film has yet to be released, but having had a look at the synopsis, I can confirm that it is one of those movies in which A Man is marooned Outdoors.
10 One danger, of course, is that the drawings could end up feeling marooned in the process.
11 A pirate could be marooned on a deserted island if he broke too many rules.
如果一名海盗违背了太多的规则,他将被流放到一个荒凉的岛上。
12 The helicopters brought off the people marooned by flood waters.
直升飞机救出了被洪水围困的人.
13 I think that people now are more marooned in their class than ever.
14 With the emphasis elsewhere, there are times when it feels as if David Fielder's Prospero is a little sidelined, marooned somewhere between irascible old man and merry prankster.
15 Dunkirk was technically a lost battle — the British and other Allied soldiers were marooned in France, surrounded by Germans on all sides except the one where the English Channel was lapping at the shore.
16 Sana’s uncle was marooned in Egypt with his family.
17 But as my luck in life seemed only to snowball from there, I thought more about the twenty or so kids who’d been marooned in that classroom, stuck with an uncaring and unmotivated teacher.
18 Dare Memorial Timorese children helped two companies of marooned Australian soldiers inflict huge casualties on Japanese imperial forces during World War II by providing them with food, shelter and knowledge of the land.
19 I was marooned on a lonely country road.
我在一条僻静的乡间道路上闲荡.
20 In The Long Winter, Pa persuades the storekeeper to sell grain for no profit to the starving townsfolk marooned for seven months by snow.