英:['pʌtəʊ]
美:['pʌtoʊ]
英:['pʌtəʊ]
美:['pʌtoʊ]
put·to
puh to
复数:putti
Italian, literally, boy, from Vulgar Latin *puttus, alteration of Latin putus; akin to Latin puer boy — more at puerile
The first known use of putto was circa 1660
1 We were hard putto finish the book on time.
我们很难按时读完这本书。
2 Reinstall them in spacious state rooms, and the allegorical intentions about which the curators’ captions inform me—how, for instance, a putto unbuckling Mars’s armor in the Dulwich painting slyly chides the hawks who were driving forward the Thirty Years’ War—might just fall into place.
3 Above him a grisaille putto holds his fingers to his lips, indicating the secret nature of the encounter.
4 In the middle of the set, a pinstriped putto peed into a fountain.
5 Rolling in the sky overhead are winged infants, or putti, who cavort amid splashy clouds of color that seem more liquid than smoky.
6 Even more striking, a dish painted by Pierre II Chapelle (Rouen c. 1725-30) depicts the wine god, Bacchus, about to enjoy a libation freshly squeezed by a merry putto.
7 These were the sorts of meals involving heaping plates of pasta and red sauce in a restaurant festooned with clichés: murals of gondolas, peasants and putti, a soundtrack heavy with accordion and kitsch.
8 The colorful knitwear that featured cherubic putti in oval frames looked inspired by church ceilings, and angelic visages also graced motorcycle jackets.
9 Here are lovely interiors by Pietro Longhi and mythological and religious paintings featuring tumbling, bare-breasted nymphs and chubby, nude putti by Giovanni Battista Tiepolo.
10 Are there any more items to putto be puton the agenda?
还有什么别的项目该列入议程?
11 The ship putto sea.
船出海航行.
12 From there putto sea again andto the lee of Cyprus because the winds were against us.
从那里又开船、因为风不顺、就贴著居比路背风岸行去.
13 From there putto sea again to the lee of Cyprus because the winds were against us.
从那里又开船,因为风不顺,就贴着居比路背风岸行去.