floridity如何读

英:[flɒ'rɪdɪtɪ]

美:[flɒ'rɪdɪtɪ]

floridity是什么意思

  • n.鲜丽;脸色好

floridity英英释义

adjective

very flowery in style : ornate florid declamationsalso: having a florid style a florid writer

florid prose

elaborately decorated

a florid interior

obsolete covered with flowers

tinged with red : ruddy

a florid complexion

marked by emotional or sexual fervor a florid sensibility

a florid secret life

fully developed : manifesting a complete and typical clinical syndrome

the florid stage of a disease

archaic healthy

floridity词源英文解释

borrowed from Latin flōridus "abounding in flowers, brightly colored, in the bloom of youth, highly colored (of rhetoric)," adjective derivative, with the suffix -idus, corresponding to flōrēre "to bloom" — more at florescence

The first known use of florid was in 1651

floridity儿童词典英英释义

floristnoun

a person who sells flowers and ornamental plants

floristnoun

a person who sells flowers and ornamental plants

floristnoun

a person who sells flowers and ornamental plants

florinnoun

an old gold coin first made in Florence in 1252

any of various coins patterned after the florin

floridadjective

flowery sense 2, ornate

florid writing

tinged with red : ruddy

a florid complexion

floridadjective

flowery sense 2, ornate

florid writing

tinged with red : ruddy

a florid complexion

floridadjective

flowery sense 2, ornate

florid writing

tinged with red : ruddy

a florid complexion

floridadjective

flowery sense 2, ornate

florid writing

tinged with red : ruddy

a florid complexion

floridity 例句

1 Furthermore, we shall see that the Florentines did not purpose to abolish floridity entirely.

2 The odd thing is that with these two domes to teach him better the designer of the Chapel of the Princes should have indulged in such floridity.

3 Readers were taken aback by myriad aspects of Christie’s florid essay, which runs nearly 4,000 words.

4 The result had all the fidelity and floridity of fan fiction.

5 While recognizing his indebtedness to his predecessor, Mr. Allen said that he sought to distinguish himself from Cross, who retained the floridity of 1930s radio broadcasting long after the decade was out.

6 It is sufficient here to say that the two main features of the style of Apuleius are its archaism and its extreme floridity.

7 a florid, gilded mirror that took up most of the wall

8 gave a florid speech in honor of the queen's visit

9 Mr. Mactavish James had been amazed by the grim construction of the speech, the lack of any response matching his "crack" in floridity.

10 Let us say that she suppressed everything that went beyond grace; that the hint of floridity was abhorrent to her.

11 The florid accusations against Ukraine and the West — combined with authorities’ public flaunting of ferocious retaliation such as cutting off part of one suspect’s ear — are probably calculated to divert attention from intelligence lapses that led to the attack, longtime Russia watchers said.

12 Venice has nothing more satisfyingly ornate: richness without floridity.

13 He had very fair hair and blue eyes, and the rose-leaf skin of his mother had in him taken on a masculine floridity.

14 He will not let himself go in the way of easy floridity, as writers may whose themes are more "ideal."

15 He disdains the “floridity” of the superrich and the “flights of vulgarity” that often run counter to the native instinct.

16 Sprawling, towering, flamboyant installations of faux flowers and leaves are fast becoming a new hallmark of restaurant design, the florid successor to past fixations like open kitchens, Mason jars and those cordless tabletop lamps.

17 Yet these young reformers had no intention of throwing overboard all the charms of floridity in song.

18 Or possibly the Dickensian situation, where gaseous floridity of language occurred because one was paid by the word.

19 So he was, and the chief secret of his success lay—despite an effect of conscious floridity and bravado—in a sincere depth of conviction manifested by a volcanic vehemence of delivery.

20 He seemed generous, and was niggardly, by turns; cultivated suavity; indulged in floridity both of manners and speech; and signed his name so as nobody could read it, though his handwriting was plain enough.

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