释义 |
Definition of diarist in English: diaristnoun 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.
Derivativesadjective 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: diaristnounˈdaɪərəstˈdīərəst 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.
|