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词汇 diarist
释义

Definition of diarist in English:

diarist

noun ˈdʌɪərɪstˈdaɪərəst
  • A person who writes a diary.

    记日记者,日记作者

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Macmillan was a bookish man, an avid reader and a prolific diarist and writer.
    • Although most diarists wrote just a sentence or two about a ritual that had come to seem ordinary, Ward devoted an entire page to the 1865 procession, in the longest and most detailed journal entry that has surfaced about Evacuation Day.
    • Samuel Pepys, the great diarist, died exactly 300 years ago on May 26th, 1703.
    • It's meant a lot to me over the years, has helped me stretch myself, improve my skills as a writer and a diarist, and, now and again, has been a listening ear when I needed one.
    • The fact that diarists who have written about trauma do worse than those who haven't suggests that it is the diary writing that is causing the health effects.
    • There he is on the front cover - a corpulent fellow with pink cheeks and a long, grey wig, staring out at us with a hint of arrogance: Samuel Pepys, the great diarist.
    • Samuel Pepys, the diarist, recorded having curds and cream or whey as a snack on several occasions.
    • Pepys is to diarists what Shakespeare is to dramatists and Boswell is to biographers; the standard against whom all others must be measured.
    • The diarist John Evelyn describes Bacon at ease in his garden accompanied by a servant with inkhorn and quill to record his thoughts.
    • The motives of the earlier diarists are unknown but an awareness that they were living in turbulent times may have inspired the most celebrated of diarists, Pepys and Evelyn.
    • As was the case for Gertrude Thomas, other diarists and journal writers, usually members of the white planter elite, remained silent about such personal matters.
    • Yet another valuable source on the laborers of timberyards are the descriptions of sawyers left by writers and diarists.
    • The growing interest in social history sparked a new interest in diaries and diarists.
    • The English diarists John Evelyn and Peter Mundy, who travelled to Holland in the 1640s, both remarked on these methods of art sales.
    • Most of these diarists ceased to write in 1945, but a few kept going through the threadbare peace.
    • Tony Benn has many of the attributes of a great diarist akin to Horace Walpole or Charles Greville and, like these two, he comes from the outer fringes of the titled classes.
    • That means that the diarists write about their families, hobbies, and interests, as well as their latest research findings and the challenges that face them in their labs.
    • She sleeps poorly and writes like a teenage diarist.
    • The English diarist James Boswell wrote in 1769, only a year after the Genoese ceded the island to France, of the excellence and diversity of Corsican wines.
    • He looks through the eyes of Roman historians, diarists like Samuel Pepys, and novelists like Charles Dickens, Charlotte Bronte and Virginia Woolf.

Derivatives

  • diaristic

  • adjective dʌɪəˈrɪstɪk
    • It is relevant that Bishop was an indefatigable keeper of notebooks, a fact that implies approval of diaristic discourse.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • There is something cinematically surreal about a number of Wasserman's diaristic scenarios.
      • I think that's because it really is rooted in the diary form, although it's not limited to it or ever merely diaristic.
      • Some of these essays are formal, academic arguments, fleshed out and footnoted, while others take on the form of literary or diaristic ventures.
      • In Wuthering Heights Catherine Earnshaw's old books and scrawled, diaristic notations discovered by Heathcliff's hapless tenant afford a spiritual channeling scene in which Catherine's ghost is summoned from the beyond.

Definition of diarist in US English:

diarist

nounˈdaɪərəstˈdīərəst
  • A person who writes a diary.

    记日记者,日记作者

    Example sentencesExamples
    • That means that the diarists write about their families, hobbies, and interests, as well as their latest research findings and the challenges that face them in their labs.
    • Most of these diarists ceased to write in 1945, but a few kept going through the threadbare peace.
    • Samuel Pepys, the diarist, recorded having curds and cream or whey as a snack on several occasions.
    • She sleeps poorly and writes like a teenage diarist.
    • The fact that diarists who have written about trauma do worse than those who haven't suggests that it is the diary writing that is causing the health effects.
    • The English diarists John Evelyn and Peter Mundy, who travelled to Holland in the 1640s, both remarked on these methods of art sales.
    • Samuel Pepys, the great diarist, died exactly 300 years ago on May 26th, 1703.
    • The English diarist James Boswell wrote in 1769, only a year after the Genoese ceded the island to France, of the excellence and diversity of Corsican wines.
    • The motives of the earlier diarists are unknown but an awareness that they were living in turbulent times may have inspired the most celebrated of diarists, Pepys and Evelyn.
    • Pepys is to diarists what Shakespeare is to dramatists and Boswell is to biographers; the standard against whom all others must be measured.
    • There he is on the front cover - a corpulent fellow with pink cheeks and a long, grey wig, staring out at us with a hint of arrogance: Samuel Pepys, the great diarist.
    • Yet another valuable source on the laborers of timberyards are the descriptions of sawyers left by writers and diarists.
    • He looks through the eyes of Roman historians, diarists like Samuel Pepys, and novelists like Charles Dickens, Charlotte Bronte and Virginia Woolf.
    • It's meant a lot to me over the years, has helped me stretch myself, improve my skills as a writer and a diarist, and, now and again, has been a listening ear when I needed one.
    • Macmillan was a bookish man, an avid reader and a prolific diarist and writer.
    • Tony Benn has many of the attributes of a great diarist akin to Horace Walpole or Charles Greville and, like these two, he comes from the outer fringes of the titled classes.
    • Although most diarists wrote just a sentence or two about a ritual that had come to seem ordinary, Ward devoted an entire page to the 1865 procession, in the longest and most detailed journal entry that has surfaced about Evacuation Day.
    • The growing interest in social history sparked a new interest in diaries and diarists.
    • As was the case for Gertrude Thomas, other diarists and journal writers, usually members of the white planter elite, remained silent about such personal matters.
    • The diarist John Evelyn describes Bacon at ease in his garden accompanied by a servant with inkhorn and quill to record his thoughts.
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