单词 | Idiom |
例句 | 1. It was an old building in the local idiom. 2. I like the idiom of modern popular music. 3. This expression is against idiom. 4. Both operas are very much in the modern idiom. 5. What word does this idiom come under? 6. To be 'hard up' is an English idiom. 7. Never too Old to Learn is an idiom. 8. The idiom was overworn by my family. 9. Coursework and examination questions are an idiom in themselves. 10. We are back again with the school textbook idiom. 11. This idiom encourages the very bad habit of believing that life is going to be as neatly packaged as a school textbook. 12. Oakeshott does not, however[Sentencedict], adopt the Hobbesian idiom of social contract. 13. The variety underlying the superficial similarity of idiom is enormous, even within the work of a single composer. 14. Johnson defends his activities in the vulgar idiom characteristic of him. 15. He evidently found the new idiom interestingly problematic, but not attractive enough to compel his full attention. 16. Feminist concerns would be articulated in any idiom deemed appropriate. 17. Translated into today's idiom, the more that local government can rely upon its own tax base, the better. 18. To "have bitten off more than you can chew" is an idiom that means you have tried to do something which is too difficult for you. 19. McCartney was also keen to write in a classical idiom, rather than a pop one. 20. the bare minimum. Naked can be used to talk about strong feelings that are not hidden:naked fear. Note also the idiom: to/with the naked eye. 21. It is no easy thing to get at the meaning of every idiom in English. 22. 'Let the cat out of the bag' is an idiom meaning to tell a secret by mistake. 23. They speak an extraordinarily complex language rich in vocabulary, idiom, and proverbial expression. 24. Nor do his choral forces always suggest that they are home in the idiom. 25. "To be on top of the world" is an idiom that means to be very happy. 26. He favours female vocalists, slow tempos, lush arrangements of tuneful melodies in the jazz-soul idiom. 27. She manages her customers expertly, often through a bantering kind of flirtation, the chief idiom of the night. 28. It takes on something of the character of an idiom. 29. Often the furore stemmed from audiences' unease at being plugged into a musical idiom shorn of familiar signposts. 30. This piece also illustrates profoundly important innovations of musical idiom. 1. To "have bitten off more than you can chew" is an idiom that means you have tried to do something which is too difficult for you. 2. McCartney was also keen to write in a classical idiom, rather than a pop one. 3. It was an old building in the local idiom. 4. I like the idiom of modern popular music. 31. 'Full of beans' is an idiom which means lively and energetic. 32. With expressions such as these, we are obviously approaching another transitional area bordering on idiom. 33. Mostly, they go round in circles, reflecting only the idiom of the day. 34. An up-and-coming composer would probably welcome the opportunity to write music in a religious idiom. 35. Photographs are, certainly, an idiom we are now all used to. 36. Retaining the idiom would have the advantage of preserving the semblance of continuity, while providing some orientation in daily life. 37. Each language has its own phraseology, its own idiom which rules out many options that are potentially available as grammatical sequences. 38. Those uneasy with the idiom would have found much to capture the ear in the intricate interplay of sounds throughout the piece. 38. try its best to collect and build good sentences. 39. Take a joke , this idiom, often put negatively. 40. He couldn't catch on to the English idiom. 41. This is a simple, direct, and useful interaction idiom. 42. She reads with a sharp eye for idiom. 43. Is it when a new idiom is measurably better? 44. The toolbar idiom has been demonstrably effective and convenient. 45. It was an idiom he'd caught from Carol Goldsmith. 46. Such overlapping within a single application is completely natural and a well - formed idiom. 47. This essay aims at illustrating the unequivalence between the source text and the target text from the perspective of vocabulary, idiom, syntax and sense of beauty. 48. The sun blazing like a ball of fire . This idiom describes the extremely hot weather. 49. Second, the economy of words results in the existence of semantic gaps and the opaqueness of the explicit meaning of the idiom. 50. Idiom is the quintessence of a language as well as literary works and poems. 51. Thus the English idiom translation involves the transfer of linguistic code as well as the transmission of cultural denotation. 52. His narrative is a super rendering of dialect speech and idiom. 53. But, as we strip away the boilerplate, we realize that the idiom used for extracting the sort key — here, the last name — is in itself somewhat convoluted. 54. In the foretime, domestication played a major role in idiom translation while foreignization was just in a subordinate status. 55. As the morphological feature idiom of regular structure and flexible usage, its grammar structure and grammar function have certain special laws. 56. It is a Chinese idiom, used to express admiration or well-wishing. 57. In the course of translation the casualty is always the typical idiom of the source language. 58. Idiom is an important language unit in lexicon system of Contemporary Chinese. 59. And nothing was so irritating as the confident way he used archaic idiom. 60. This is an excellent control idiom for sovereign - posture programs with which users interact for long hours. 61. The last not the least, practice makes perfect. Every learners know this simple idiom. Make progress day by day, and one day you will surprisedly find you speak fluent English! 62. Microsoft has extended the idiom so that you can create your own completely new, completely custom toolbars. 63. In the present case, the translators' task is to represent the artistry of the Chinese original in the idiom of American English -with all its sound, color, and rhetoric. 64. This word was elevated in 1960s from being slangy to the idiom category. 65. A word, a phrase, or an idiom peculiar to the English language, especially as spoken in England; a Briticism. 66. More English knowledge: English alphabet, English phonetic , English idiom, English Toponym, English Irregular Verb etc. 67. The stiff-upper-lip protocol of international diplomacy requires negotiators to, in the colourful idiom of a Malayalam saying, Ask for a match-stick to light your bidi even when your beard is on fire. 68. This idiom is used to describe the powerfulness of an army's capabilities. 69. They were subtle portraits, sometimes catching exactly the dry New England idiom. 70. This story gave rise to the idiom A Stag A Horse. 71. The idiom delivers more information in return for less effort by users. 72. Proponents of the second view believe that the literal meanings of the constituents do contribute to the overall idiomatic meaning of the idiom, and therefore, idioms are analyzable. 73. Conversely, a simple text field can accept any alphanumeric data a user keys into it. This open-ended entry idiom is an example of an unbounded entry control. 74. Lexical decision method was used to examine the effect of initial word frequency and last word frequency of Chinese idioms on the highly familiar idiom recognition time. 75. In an effort to create more efficient code, Java programmers created the double-checked locking idiom to be used with the Singleton creation pattern to limit how much code is synchronized. 76. An idiom in the morning is worth two in the evening. 77. The effects of difference of the standard and design idiom on the structure cheapness were discussed. It will be useful to standard revisal and project construction. 78. The familiar Python idiom for elem in lst: now actually asks lst to produce an iterator. 79. List controls can be treated as palettes of goodies to use in a direct - manipulation idiom. 80. This idiom is nowadays used to indicate metaphorically halting an attack or ceasing all activities. 81. He spoke in the idiom of the New England countryside. 82. To be hard up is an English idiom meaning to lack money. 83. These models provide some theoretical guidance on idiom semantic processing in the fields of psycholinguistics and neurolinguistics. 84. No idiom is taboo, no accent forbidden; there is simply a better chance of doing well if the writer holds a steady course, enters the stream of English quietly, and does not thrash about. 85. The text is handing in discussed conception to word of description. It is that important to discussing difference from Chinese"s word of description proverb locution and idiom." 86. She is, in fact, a perfect illustration of the French idiom "to be comfortable in one's own skin.". 87. Although the validation control is a very widespread idiom, most such controls can be improved. 88. The memory model allows what is known as "out-of-order writes" and is a prime reason why this idiom fails. 89. This idiom may even be usefully employed for functions that must be submitted. 90. Therefore, to make sure the scope of the idiom, to make a clear distinction with other familiar languages, especially with locution, became the core problem to decide the idiom. 91. This idiom comes from the above story. It means being in a very difficult situation at the end of one's tether. 92. The above idiom means that people toare likely to end up doing activities of questionable morality. 93. The little play was sprinkled with humour and local idiom. 94. for-each loop: When iterating over an array, the compiler generates an induction variable and the standard array iteration idiom. 95. Although literary quotation has very distinctive difference from idiom, vulgarism, proverb and parol, they are closely associated with one another and sometimes amalgamated. 96. Chen yu luo yan and idiom, used to describe a woman's beauty. 97. A Celtic idiom . A Greek or Latin expression or idiom . A word, a phrase, or an idiom peculiar to the English language, especially as spoken in England; a Briticism . 98. It provided an idiom for those non-Westernized people who take their Islam seriously, as against the technocrat Mamlukes who govern them in virtue of their access to Western technology. 98. try its best to collect and create good sentences. 99. This idiom originally meant to befool others with tricks. Later it is used to mean to keep changing ones' mind. 100. The idiom "Offer one's services as Mao Sui did" is used to describe those who volunteer or recommend themselves without introduction or invitation. 101. The above story provided the idiom grass and startle snake. 102. For that moment Michael was struck by the idiom Tessio had used. 103. If you use project management or organization chart programs, you are undoubtedly familiar with this idiom. 104. English idiom is a form of language with coloring, it is concise, vivid, harmonious and offhanded . 105. This idiom comes from the merry old days of the public beheading. 106. Trying to force the C ++ idiom of deterministic finalization into the C # language won't work well. 107. The numeral idiom has parable, exaggeration, tactful and reserved etc. 108. China has two idiom that concern with landscape: Barren mountains and unruly rivers and at the end of one's resources. 109. This idiom, do not praise to do not devaluate apparently, just spoke a kind of phenomenon. 110. In addition, you must use the correct programming idiom to check if the collector has reclaimed the object before using it, and if it has, you must re-create the object first. 111. We even have a well - established idiom to support this: The Undo function. 112. If you cannot intuit an idiom, neither can you reason it out. 113. Numeral idiom, as an important part of the idiom, is a special language phenomenon. 114. There is probably no user - interface idiom more abused than the error dialog. 115. This idiom is used to mean overrating oneself and trying to do what is beyond one's ability. The result can be nothing but failure. 116. Allegorical Saying ( Xiehouyu ) is an idiom that is widely used, popular, jocular and vivid sentence. 117. "Elephant in the room" is an English idiom for an obvious truth that is being ignored or goes unaddressed. 118. A formal dictionary will only take you so far—and will usually stop short when you need the definition of a catchphrase, buzzword, idiom, slang word, or acronym. 119. A "skeleton in the closet" is an English idiom that means everyone has a secret, some hidden dream or sorrow. 120. It is from that exotic image that we get this idiom meaning to define a symbolic point beyond which there is no further compromise. |
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