英:[ˈfænfeə(r)]
美:[ˈfænfer]
英:[ˈfænfeə(r)]
美:[ˈfænfer]
fan·fare
faen feIr
noun
a flourish of trumpets, used to mark an entrance or beginning.The entrance of the queen was announced with a splendid fanfare.
activity carried out with similar flourish and showiness, esp. for publicity or promotional purposes.The visiting prince was welcomed with a great deal of fanfare at the airport; there was even a band to play his country's anthem.
大约1600年,“小号或喇叭上响起的华丽乐段”,源自法语 fanfare “小号吹奏”,16世纪,源自 fanfarer “吹小号”,可能是拟声词,或者是从阿拉伯语 farfar “喋喋不休的人”(拟声)借来的(与西班牙语 fanfarron “吹牛”,意大利语 fanfano “喋喋不休的人”一起)。法语 fanfaron 在1670年代也带着“自夸”的意思进入了英语。
闭幕式上的进行曲
运动会开幕式
French
The first known use of fanfare was in 1605
fattenverb
to make or become fat
fat1 of 3adjective
plump entry 5, fleshy
oily sense 1, greasy
thick entry 1 sense 1
a fat book
well stocked : abundant
profitable
accepted a fat contract
productive sense 1, fertile
being swollen
got a fat lip in the fight
fat2 of 3verb
to make fat : fatten
fat3 of 3noun
animal tissue consisting chiefly of cells containing much greasy or oily matter
any of numerous compounds of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen that make up most of plant and animal fat, are a major class of energy-rich food, and can be dissolved by ether but not by water
a solid or semisolid fat (as lard) as distinguished from an oil
the best or richest part
the fat of the land
an amount beyond what is usual or needed : excess
father1 of 2noun
a male parent
capitalized god sense 1
capitalized the first person of the Christian Trinity
ancestor sense 1
a man who cares for another as a father might
a man who invents or begins something
the father of modern science
priest—used especially as a title
father2 of 2verb
beget sense 1
to be the founder, producer, or author of
to treat or care for someone as a father
fatheadnoun
a stupid person
Farsinoun
persian sense 2
farinanoun
a fine meal made chiefly from cereal grains used especially as a breakfast cereal
far-fetchedadjective
not easily or naturally thought of : improbable
gave some far-fetched excuse
fanfarenoun
a short stirring tune played by trumpets
1 The final two movements, slighter fanfares and peaceful closing, are nervous-seeming returns to normalcy, as if the past were keeping check.
2 "The Onion Movie," released straight to video in 2008 with little fanfare and after a long incubation period, is a case in point.
3 I mean, I love that my choice has been so warmly received and with so little fanfare.
4 With little fanfare, other dancers swiftly rush forward to execute a charming Russian folk dance that sparkles with low kicks and one-footed spins.
5 The second season was met with considerably less fanfare than the first, which is not to say the case of Bergdahl isn’t deeply interesting or culturally significant.
6 Her departure from New York, where she lived much of her career, was cause for dramatic fanfare among the city’s theater elite.
7 So many laurels hung around one’s neck can easily become heavy, but Mitchell has welcomed all of this fanfare with an amused lightness — a shimmy, a chortle and a fresh round of pinot grigio.
8 The Knockout Rounds on “The Voice” kicked off Monday with the usual fanfare: a flurry of coach declarations about “the best of the best” and deeper-than-ever cuts and “one step away from the live shows.”
9 When Conan O'Brien exited "The Tonight Show" with much fanfare, he took to Twitter as an outlet, like a spigot for accruing monologue jokes.
10 The orchestra gently eggs the soloist on into the third section, inaugurated with frosty Adamsian fragments of trumpet fanfare.
11 It's perhaps telling that Warner Bros. slipped it onto its streaming platform with little fanfare on the last day of the long weekend.
12 Last month, without much fanfare or warning, the State College of Florida made all of its new faculty contingency hires.
13 Then a sudden fanfare of trumpets sounded and he jumped to the floor, bowing deeply as Gertrude and Claudius, arm in arm, descended the processional stairs into the great hall.
14 It was done without any real fanfare or difficulty because our only equipment was telephones and typewriters.
15 “Close Encounters” will mark its 40th anniversary with appropriate fanfare.
16 The Yale trumpeters sounded excellent in the opening fanfare of the work, which was commissioned for the bicentennial of the French Revolution.
17 Then, with little fanfare, those items are placed out for sale.
18 What was all that fanfare about her best days being as a disco queen, then?
19 To much fanfare, the city opened part of the site for tourists in 1999.
20 Kennedy Center’s new organ arrives to much fanfare.
1 精心准备的欢迎仪式
2 夸耀
viewy flaunt swank ostentation pomposity ritz ostent glory brag pride vaunt make a display of pique oneself on pique oneself upon flaunting epideictic display pageantry boast parade overcrow pique preen show-off
5 宣传
propagandist commercial plug promotion billing advocacy propaganda publicity buildup exploitation propagation advocation semination propagandism propagandize press-agent feature sell promote drum headline advertise exploit preach propagate publicize promulgate publicise
6 号角齐鸣
7 炫耀
fastuous fine blatant conspicuous glaring grandstand pretentious flamboyant showy glitzy ostentatious hotshot swank splashy flaunty splurge gaudery fofarraw display spread flash demonstration parade splash flourish strut glare pageant brandish panache affectation show-off ostentation pomposity frippery ritz foofaraw frounce tigerism show flaunt peacock gam showboat sport affect flare plume cut a swath strut stuff
8 短奏
9 隆重的欢迎