释义 |
cortege
/kɔ:ˈteiʒ//kɔr'teʒ/
词组 | 习惯用语
您要查找的是不是:- cortex n. 皮质;树皮;果皮
- cortical adj. [生]皮质的;皮层的;外皮的
- cordage n. 绳索;纤维绳;薪炭材的堆积数
- Cortes n. (西班牙或葡萄牙的)议会
网络短语:cortege matrix 行列矩阵 cortege education 大学教育 cortege poems 扈从诗 cortege lictor retainer retinue 扈从 attendant cortege entourage famulus pursuivant 随从
原声例句
VOA常速英语_欧洲 Along the royal mile thousands waited to see the cortege. 在皇家一英里沿线,数以千计的人等待观看仪仗队。 《卫报》(文章版) In 2002, at 12.45 pm, a Lancaster bomber and two Spitfires flew over the cortege for his wife and dipped their wings. 2002 年,下午 12 点 45 分,一架兰开斯特轰炸机和两架喷火飞机飞过他妻子的队伍,垂下翅膀。 BBC世界头条 His cortege travelled through the streets after the 60-year-old had been lying in state where thousands queued to file past his coffin. 他的送葬队伍穿过街道 这名60岁的球星供人吊唁 数千人排队从他的棺木前经过。 百年孤独 She could not have conceivedof a more desolate cortege. 她无法想象会有比这更凄凉的陪葬仪式。 一双蓝蓝的眼睛(下) Knight and Stephen went outside, and came close to the procession as it moved off. A carriage belonging to the cortege turned round close to a lamp. 奈特和斯蒂芬走到外面,在游行队伍离开时靠近他们。随从的一辆马车靠近一盏灯转了个弯。
英语百科
List of French expressions in English
↑ "[Daniel] Harding is a protégé of Sir Simon Rattle, himself once heralded as the great young hope of British Music," Nigel Reynolds, Britain's latest prodigy takes up toughest baton, The Daily Telegraph, Thursday, September 12, 1996.↑ "Undoubtedly his modus operandi is not unlike the fluent pub raconteur who augments a story until he gets a laugh," Bill Bryson, A Yank at the court of Little England, The Sunday Times, 11 August 1996.↑ "Support for the Tibetan movement stopped in 1971 when President Nixon and Henry Kissinger pursued a policy of rapprochement with China." Brent Navarro, Tibet: Assessing its Potential for China's Instability, September 15, 2007.↑ "A startling number of American restaurateurs have turned to caviar chic as a sure way of winning customers," Tony Allen Mills, Style, 15 September 1996.↑ "As one of the Prime Minister's most devoted supporters put it to me, 'Tory policy is based on the democratic philosophy of Aristotle and Pluto,' and was quite uncomprehending at my riposte that Pluto is a cartoon dog invented by Walt Disney," Brian Sewell, Greedy, vain and arrogant – the politicians who insult us all, Evening Standard, 13 August 1996.↑ "This roman à clef sets out to recount the struggle between the media moguls Robert Maxwell [...] and Rupert Murdoch," Review by Laurence Meyer of Jeffrey Archer's The Fourth Estate, International Herald Tribune, Wednesday July 31, 1996.↑ "The pictures he took of [Julia] Roberts — sans new boyfriend — will run in the American tabloid The Star," Videonasties, The Sunday Times, Style, 18 August 1996.↑ "Nigel Lawson used to be known by the sobriquet of 'Smuggins'," Peter Hillmore, Pendennis, The Observer Review, 27 October 1996.↑ "So they come up with a succes d'estime and a series of flops d'estime follow," Christopher Fildes, Take it easy Mr Bond, help is on the way – Miss Moneypenny will fix it, Business News, The Daily Telegraph, Saturday, August 17, 1996.↑ "The focus of the salon was the magnificent chimney piece, a tour de force in moulded and faceted glass – and housing an up-to-date electric fire," Kenneth Powell, Mayfair's hidden treasure, The Sunday Review, The Sunday Telegraph, August 18, 1996↑ "The film begins briskly, with [...] a tour-de-force action scene in mid-air", Nigel Andrews, Super hero into super-hulk, Financial Times, Thursday August 22, 1996.↑ "It [the proposed agreement] also involves the banks swapping at least £2 billion debt into two tranches of convertible securities which would, if converted, give them between 25% and 80% of the fully diluted equity," Jonathan Ford, Tunnel debt talks hit conversion snag, Evening Standard, Business Day, Thursday, 12 September 1996.↑ "This constant va-et-vient of fortune hunters is what gives Lhasa the impermanent, feverish atmosphere of a typical cowboy town," Ian Buruma, Tibet Disenchanted, China File, July 20, 2000 (first published in the July 20, 2000 issue of the New York Review of Books).↑ "De Gaulle was always proud of displaying "la différence" vis-à-vis the Americans in the Arab world," Kirsty Lang, They're not all right, Jacques, The Sunday Times, 27 October 1996.↑ "a nation of voyeurs: people who get their gustatory kicks from watching other people cook but don't actually do it themselves", Brenda Maddox, Cooking for kitchen voyeurs, The Times, Wednesday September 11, 1996.↑ http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/nostalgie%20de%20la%20boue↑ "Teacher Alan Faulkner warned: 'Some of the skirts were getting very risque and [...] the girls would face disciplinary action'," Daily Mail, Saturday September 21, 1996.↑ "The living room, with its leather sofa from Harrods, payphone and glass coffee table, is the pièce de résistance," My friend the high-flying dole cheat, The Daily Telegraph, Wednesday, August 14, 1996.↑ voir dire The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition (2006)↑ voir The Anglo-Norman Dictionary
近义、反义、联想词
近义词n. procession, gathering, assemblage 联想词procession队伍, 行列;funeral葬礼;parade游行;march行军,进军;casket匣子;convoy护航队;mausoleum陵墓;entourage随行人员;coffin棺材;marches边界地区;funerals丧葬;
英英词典
cortege n.- a funeral procession
- the group following and attending to some important person
synonymous: retinue, suite, entourage
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