laureate如何读

英:[ˈlɒriət]

美:[ˈlɔriət]

laureate是什么意思

  • n. 荣誉获得者,获奖者;桂冠诗人(Poet Laureate 的简称)
  • adj. <文>(作为荣誉标志)佩戴桂冠的;<文>(花冠,花环)用月桂枝叶编织的;荣誉的
  • v. 使戴桂冠;任命为桂冠诗人

laureate自然拼读

lau·re·ate

lor ri iht

laureate变形

复数:laureates

第三人称单数:laureates

现在分词:laureating

过去式:laureated

过去分词:laureated

laureate扩展

laureateship (n.)

laureate词根

词根:laurel

adj.

laurelled 戴桂冠的;获得殊荣的

n.

laurel 桂冠,殊荣;月桂树

vt.

laurel 授予荣誉,使戴桂冠

laureate英英释义

noun

the recipient of honor or recognition for achievement in an art or sciencespecifically: poet laureate

a Nobel laureate

verb

transitive verb

to crown with or as if with a laurel wreath for excellence or achievement

to appoint to the office of poet laureate

adjective

honored for outstanding achievement in an art or science see also poet laureate

This was a term coined in the 1950s by Nobel laureate chemist Irving Langmuir …—Gary Taubes

crowned with laurel

Minted in France in 1807, the front of the medal shows the laureate head of Emperor Napoleon and, on the reverse, an eagle clutching a thunderbolt, part of the emperor's imperial seal.—Brice Stump

laureate词组

poet laureate桂冠诗人;优秀的诗人

laureate词源中文解释

“crowned with laurels”(作为荣誉标志),14世纪晚期,最早的引用是指诗歌荣誉,来自拉丁语 laureatus “戴着月桂花冠”,来自 laurea “月桂花冠”(象征诗歌中的胜利或荣誉),来自 laureus “月桂花的”,来自 laurus “月桂花”(参见 laurel(n.))。

Laureat poete 最早出现在《坎特伯雷故事集》(指彼得拉克- Fraunceys Petrak)中; 中古英语中也用于伊索寓言和14世纪初的乔叟。倒装形式 poet laureate,模仿拉丁语语序,最早出现在英语中的约为1400年; 第一个官方的诗人桂冠可能是本·琼森(1638年),尽管第一个记录的是德莱顿(1668年)。1947年扩展到诺贝尔奖获得者。作为名词,1520年代,来自形容词或来自对 poet laureate 的错误阅读。相关: Laureateship(1732年), laureation。

laureate词源英文解释

Noun and Verb Middle English, crowned with laurel as a distinction, from Latin laureatus, from laurea laurel wreath, from feminine of laureus of laurel, from laurus

The first known use of laureate was in 1508

laureate儿童词典英英释义

lavatorynoun

a basin for washingespecially: a small sink with running water and drainpipe

a room with lavatories and usually with toilets

toilet sense 2b

lavatorynoun

a basin for washingespecially: a small sink with running water and drainpipe

a room with lavatories and usually with toilets

toilet sense 2b

lavalierenoun

an ornament hanging from a chain that is worn around the neck

lavanoun

melted rock coming from a volcanoalso: such rock that has cooled and hardened

laurelnoun

an evergreen shrub or tree of southern Europe related to the sassafras and cinnamon with shiny pointed leaves used by the ancient Greeks to crown victors in various contests

a tree or shrub (as a mountain laurel) that resembles the true laurel

a crown of laurel

honor entry 1 sense 1, fame—usually used in plural

laurelnoun

an evergreen shrub or tree of southern Europe related to the sassafras and cinnamon with shiny pointed leaves used by the ancient Greeks to crown victors in various contests

a tree or shrub (as a mountain laurel) that resembles the true laurel

a crown of laurel

honor entry 1 sense 1, fame—usually used in plural

laureatenoun

a person honored for achievement in an art or scienceespecially: poet laureate

laureatenoun

a person honored for achievement in an art or scienceespecially: poet laureate

laureatenoun

a person honored for achievement in an art or scienceespecially: poet laureate

laureate 例句

1 “I just stood there with a mike like a lounge lizard, reading poems and leading haiku exercises,” Ms. Raptosh, who is also Boise’s former poet laureate, recalled.

2 On the young people he met as California poet laureate: I went to high schools.

3 Malfi, written in 1612, is the glittering masterpiece of a playwright whose propensity for violence and the macabre led to him be described by George Bernard Shaw as the Tussaud laureate.

4 He continued as the orchestra’s conductor laureate, serving on the orchestra’s artistic staff for 56 years.

5 The group in December named Rowling one of its Ripple of Hope laureates for her founding of Lumos, which works to get children worldwide out of orphanages and into families.

6 Swigging Schlitz from a bottle, the pockmarked laureate of the underground discoursed on one of the few traits that, as is well known, one may possess though never acquire.

7 The curators were convicted for their 2007 exhibit entitled "Forbidden Art" at the Sakharov Museum, a human rights center named after celebrated dissident physicist and Nobel peace prize laureate Andrei Sakharov.

8 He would be named poet laureate of the United States in 1990, and win the Pulitzer Prize for poetry in 1999 for his collection Blizzard of One.

9 The Nobel literature laureate announced the plan at a news conference Wednesday, his 76th birthday.

10 Former children's laureate Michael Rosen said that he was "absolutely appalled and utterly enraged" by the news.

11 The animating figure was Caltech chemist Linus Pauling, a Nobel laureate known for his strong leftist views and stem-winding oratorical flair.

12 A past poet laureate of Rhode Island, Ms. Wright was at her death the Israel J. Kapstein professor of English and professor of literary arts at Brown University, where she had taught since 1983.

13 What do you think about his choice as poet laureate?

14 Tracy K. Smith, America’s poet laureate, returns with her first collection since “Life on Mars” won a Pulitzer Prize in 2012.

15 At the time of the gift, Heaney, 72, was a global bardic presence, a Nobel laureate wreathed in acclaim as one of the leading poets in the world.

16 Robert Pinsky was the Poet Laureate a few years ago.

罗伯特是几年前的桂冠诗人.

17 Andrew Motion, the former poet laureate, believes that maintaining libraries is fundamentally important.

18 Former U.S. poet laureate Billy Collins, one of the contest's judges, said of her work, “These are witty but deeply serious poems.”

19 Friday night, we have the poet laureate, whoever that is at the time.

20 The laureate is selected by an independent jury of five to nine professionals, who serve for several years so that each panel includes past and new members.

laureate 同义词

laureate 短语相关

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