英:[eksˈnaihiləu]
美:[ɛksˈniəˌlo, ˈnaɪ-, ˈnɪ-]
英:[eksˈnaihiləu]
美:[ɛksˈniəˌlo, ˈnaɪ-, ˈnɪ-]
adj.& adv.
<拉>出于无的[地],无中生有的[地]
adverb or adjective
from or out of nothing
creation ex nihilo
拉丁语,字面意思为“从无中而来”,源自 ex “从……中出来”(见 ex-)和 nihil 的与格 nihilo,“没有”(见 nil)。
Latin
The first known use of ex nihilo was in 1656
1 Then a major land war broke out in Europe, and the same cultural stratum that had been vigorously enforcing COVID hygiene rules just a few weeks before moved on, as if overnight, to what seemed like an ex nihilo enthusiasm for the liberal Atlanticist order.
2 What follows is a truncated history of the decline in union membership in the United States, which treats the phenomenon as a mysterious ex nihilo occurrence, and an amicable vision of the future of the worker-employer relationship built on mutual respect and benevolence.
3 To Page, the salient point is that God created the Universe ex nihilo – from absolutely nothing.
4 These lurid blossoms, the largest in the world, seem to have erupted — blossomed seems too delicate a description — ex nihilo.
5 Woke ideas about race and power did not form ex nihilo in the minds of DEI consultants at K–12 schools.
6 The Hilton was Europe’s first major modern hotel to be constructed ex nihilo after the war, built with glass, steel and White Portland cement from Germany, marble from Italy, aluminum windows, elevators and air-conditioning units from America.
7 The process by which the horse-cart became the Mercedes EQ was one of evolution, not invention ex nihilo.
8 Wrapped up in the consequences of God’s perfection, Christians also have to solve the problem of whether creation happened ex nihilo.
9 The event itself may be seen as either ex nihilo or order from preexisting chaos.
事件本身可以被看作要么不可得的虚无要么来自现有混沌的法则.
1 从无