释义 |
Definition of reveille in English: reveillenoun rɪˈvaliˈrɛvəli A signal sounded especially on a bugle or drum to wake personnel in the armed forces. (部队)起床号 reveille was at 0430 hours Example sentencesExamples - After reveille, you'll be treated to a Marine-style pre-sunrise breakfast, followed by a brisk 20-K run around the Green Zone perimeter.
- When Neal called the reveille Casey jumped up, like Jennifer, and made her bed in record time.
- As the caretaker manager released his squad at Hampden last Wednesday, the mobile of Rainer Bonhof, standing at the back of the room, trilled to the sound of a bugle's reveille.
- The reveille filled the air, the two Garda members ushered on the traffic and under the midday sweltering sun, the tricolour was raised, now flying proudly at full mast.
- On Remembrance Day the last post is followed by a period of silence, and then by the reveille - the day's first bugle-call - to symbolize death and resurrection.
- The jays conduct a rousing reveille of check check check to awaken me at dawn, eliminating the need for mechanical alarm clocks.
- The drums did not beat reveille until 6:30 and it seems everyone is sluggish in rising this morning, seeing as both sides are so frozen there is little chance of anything happening.
- As the bugler played the reveille he finished his salute and walked past the Pool of Remembrance where a crowd had gathered.
- No reveille announced our start the next morning.
- Gina woke up to the notes of a trumpet sounding reveille breaking the dewy morning silence.
- She woke early to her Palm PC singing a reveille bugle call.
- At five o'clock in the morning, the reveille sounds and prisoner Ivan Denisovich Shukov lies in his bunk, wondering if he should get up.
- The bugler's name was Jospeh and he used to play the reveille first thing in the morning and sound the retreat each night at sunset.
- I woke the next morning to the sound of reveille feeling very sore.
- With an affectionate gaze at his sober colleague, the prudent maidservant removes the wine-bottle, while a trumpeter at the door satirically sounds the reveille.
- In any case there is the war, a hilltop, a huntsman, and a mournful reveille to life - described in sentences so off-kilter and beautiful you don't know whether to cry out for help or just start crying.
- As the crowd stood silent between the sounding of the last post and reveille, and standards were held proudly to attention, even the noise of traffic and the chatter of passing pedestrians failed to detract from the dignity of the occasion.
- It's not that we get the reveille as a wake-up alarm, or we have to do ten push-ups if we commit errors.
- On the battlefield a bugle plays reveille and the lines of soldiers stir, ready to surge forward.
- Casey kept her room perfectly clean, barely touching her old playthings and rose early each morning, expecting a reveille from Agent Michael.
OriginMid 17th century: from French réveillez! 'wake up!', imperative plural of réveiller, based on Latin vigilare 'keep watch'. RhymesAli, alley, Allie, Ally, bally, dally, dilly-dally, farfalle, galley, Halley, mallee, Mexicali, pally, Raleigh, rally, sally, tally, valley Definition of reveille in US English: reveillenounˈrevəlēˈrɛvəli A signal sounded especially on a bugle or drum to wake personnel in the armed forces. (部队)起床号 reveille was at 0430 hours Example sentencesExamples - The reveille filled the air, the two Garda members ushered on the traffic and under the midday sweltering sun, the tricolour was raised, now flying proudly at full mast.
- In any case there is the war, a hilltop, a huntsman, and a mournful reveille to life - described in sentences so off-kilter and beautiful you don't know whether to cry out for help or just start crying.
- The jays conduct a rousing reveille of check check check to awaken me at dawn, eliminating the need for mechanical alarm clocks.
- When Neal called the reveille Casey jumped up, like Jennifer, and made her bed in record time.
- At five o'clock in the morning, the reveille sounds and prisoner Ivan Denisovich Shukov lies in his bunk, wondering if he should get up.
- The bugler's name was Jospeh and he used to play the reveille first thing in the morning and sound the retreat each night at sunset.
- After reveille, you'll be treated to a Marine-style pre-sunrise breakfast, followed by a brisk 20-K run around the Green Zone perimeter.
- On Remembrance Day the last post is followed by a period of silence, and then by the reveille - the day's first bugle-call - to symbolize death and resurrection.
- She woke early to her Palm PC singing a reveille bugle call.
- It's not that we get the reveille as a wake-up alarm, or we have to do ten push-ups if we commit errors.
- Casey kept her room perfectly clean, barely touching her old playthings and rose early each morning, expecting a reveille from Agent Michael.
- As the crowd stood silent between the sounding of the last post and reveille, and standards were held proudly to attention, even the noise of traffic and the chatter of passing pedestrians failed to detract from the dignity of the occasion.
- As the bugler played the reveille he finished his salute and walked past the Pool of Remembrance where a crowd had gathered.
- The drums did not beat reveille until 6:30 and it seems everyone is sluggish in rising this morning, seeing as both sides are so frozen there is little chance of anything happening.
- No reveille announced our start the next morning.
- As the caretaker manager released his squad at Hampden last Wednesday, the mobile of Rainer Bonhof, standing at the back of the room, trilled to the sound of a bugle's reveille.
- With an affectionate gaze at his sober colleague, the prudent maidservant removes the wine-bottle, while a trumpeter at the door satirically sounds the reveille.
- Gina woke up to the notes of a trumpet sounding reveille breaking the dewy morning silence.
- I woke the next morning to the sound of reveille feeling very sore.
- On the battlefield a bugle plays reveille and the lines of soldiers stir, ready to surge forward.
OriginMid 17th century: from French réveillez! ‘wake up!’, imperative plural of réveiller, based on Latin vigilare ‘keep watch’. |