英:[ˈbæriəʊ]
美:[ˈbɑrioʊ]
英:[ˈbæriəʊ]
美:[ˈbɑrioʊ]
bar·ri·o
ba ri o
复数:barrios
1841年,“西班牙或说西班牙语的城市的行政区”,有时也用于农村定居点,源自西班牙语 barrio “区,郊区”,来自阿拉伯语 barriya “开阔的乡村”(女性),源自 barr “城外”。 “美国城市中说西班牙语的区域”(1939年)最初是指纽约的西班牙哈莱姆区。
Spanish, from Arabic barrī of the open country, from barr outside, open country
The first known use of barrio was in 1833
bartendernoun
a person who serves alcoholic drinks at a bar
bartendernoun
a person who serves alcoholic drinks at a bar
bar1 of 4noun
a straight piece (as of metal or wood) that is longer than it is wide
a usually rectangular piece or block of material
a bar of soap
something that hinders or blocks : obstacle
a bank (as of sand) partly or entirely under water along a shore or in a river
the railing in a courtroom around the place where the business of the court is carried on
a court of law
the profession of law
stripe entry 3 sense 1
a counter on which alcoholic drinks or food is served
barroom
a vertical line across the musical staff before the beginning of a measure
measure entry 1 sense 4c
standard entry 1 sense 2a
raise the bar for improving new medicines
bar2 of 4verb
to fasten with a bar
bar the door
to mark with bars : stripe
gray feathers barred with brown
to block off : close
bar the road with a chain
to keep out : exclude
bar reporters from a meeting
prevent sense 1, forbid
the judge barred them from talking to reporters
bar3 of 4preposition
with the exception of
bar none
bar4 of 4noun
a unit of pressure equal to 100,000 pascals
barrow1 of 2noun
a large burial mound of earth or stones
barrow2 of 2noun
a structure that has handles and sometimes a wheel and is used for carrying things
a cart with a shallow box body, two wheels, and shafts for pushing it : pushcart
barrow1 of 2noun
a large burial mound of earth or stones
barrow2 of 2noun
a structure that has handles and sometimes a wheel and is used for carrying things
a cart with a shallow box body, two wheels, and shafts for pushing it : pushcart
barroomnoun
a place of business for the sale of alcoholic drinks
barrionoun
a neighborhood where most of the people speak Spanish
1 The pale blue exterior of the 200-year-old house in the Santiago barrio that David and his partner, Robert Willson, bought a few years ago is reserved, almost anonymous.
2 It is also known as La Colombia Chiquita because of its connection to the barrios in Colombia.
3 In the capital's sprawling hillside barrios jobs are scarce and Chávez's party is looking electorally vulnerable just three months before parliamentary elections.
4 On the way back down, a man returning from a visit to friends said the journey to the barrio had been reduced from an hour or more on foot to 10 minutes by cable car.
5 “This is the most beautiful thing, to see that your barrio is involved in this; it’s the best feeling.”
6 And the stories that my mother gave me, her journey from Mexico City from the poorest barrio, Tepito, and the outer edge of that barrio called El Nino Perdido, The Lost Child.
7 I didn’t know to say goodbye to our house and our barrio, nor to wave to the neighbors who looked out curiously as we wound our way to the main road.
8 Television footage shows the bull throwing Barrio into the air before goring him on the right-hand side of his chest and violently throwing him.
据电视台的录像显示,公牛将巴里奥高高抛起,然后顶在了他胸腔的右侧,非常凶猛地将他抛了出去。
9 Deller, who made a living in construction for much of his life, joined a volunteer effort last week to rebuild houses in the barrios.
10 You know, war zones, bandit country, no-go urban murder barrios, that kind of thing.
11 Birds left the barrio, and insects disappeared into hidden cracks and crevices, taking their songs.
12 Ensemble numbers were satisfying because they resembled a Buenos Aires barrio club scene, glammed up with a few sequins and choreographic tricks, such as couples lining up on the diagonal and executing split-lifts in unison.
13 A lazy river, the Segura, drifts beneath picturesque bridges that link its historic center with more recent barrios on the southern bank.
14 I crested the hill where Doña Zena’s house perched, commanding a view of the barrio.
15 Given the government’s initiatives, often presented as progress, these barrios are the last obstacle standing in the government’s way.
16 Most of the barrio’s women had put in some time dusting, washing the floors and walls, sprinkling agua florida all over, positioning wreaths, bathing Don Berto and laying him out in his box.
17 It is almost 22 years since Pablo Escobar, the Colombian drugs kingpin, was shot dead on a barrio rooftop in Medellín, but his story has never been more popular.
18 Our grandmother had staved off poverty with her fierce intellect and sumptuous recipes, augmenting her school janitor wages by selling food in her barrio.
19 I envied those minority students who graduated to work among lower-class Hispanics at barrio chnics or legal aid centers.
20 But school was also where I compared my family to others in the barrio.