释义 |
Definition of Parisian in English: Parisianadjective pəˈrɪzɪənpəˈriʒən Relating to Paris. (与)巴黎(有关)的 Example sentencesExamples - There's only so much you can do to make any part of Hackney look like a Parisian boulevard, especially just after you've got up.
- We soon discover he also has highly honed fighting reflexes, a knowledge of maps, weapons and telecommunications, and can drive a car at high speed through Parisian traffic with dazzling virtuosity.
- The houses are built stoutly of granite and the mile-long main street is as broad as a Parisian boulevard.
- Many of the buildings have taken a direct influence from Parisian architecture, and like Paris, the skyscrapers seem to lie around the city's edges.
- How gleeful, internally that is, were we to post about the new cleanly chic Parisian coffee shop we discovered a few days ago on 2nd Avenue in the East Village.
- Golden arches have a presence on Parisian streets.
- It was clear that the Parisian populace preferred the boulevard theatre, cabarets, and café-concerts.
- A North American deal has finally clicked for this Parisian trio (Heaven's Dust is actually a good two years old), so now we'll see if they click with a North American audience.
- You know how big and wide the main Parisian boulevards are?
- The city's ethos doesn't provide an obvious method of attack; there's no Amsterdam coffee houses, Parisian cafes, or British pubs.
- There is no ‘death of the author’ (that Parisian cliché) in my world view.
- Many a well-to-do lady demanded her own dog of the Parisian boulevards.
- Spices come in many colors at Parisian farmer's markets.
- It did not help matters that she would follow her sentences with a deep sniff, as if expecting to engage in an obnoxious breathing contest with Parisian intellectuals.
- The tree-lined boulevards are populated by ultra-expensive Rodeo Drive and Parisian boutiques.
- The play is lurid and sadomasochistic, the delight of Parisian decadents at the time, but slow, obvious, and overdone, as Wilde always was whenever he wrote tragedy.
- In return she thought him ‘a typical Parisian boulevard product’.
- The Post Office had organised a street party, the weather was fine and, for an hour or two, village street was more like a Parisian boulevard with wine and cheese and accordion music.
- The film had a lot of thrilling camera work, especially the scene immediately following the deaf-children prologue, the long-take, roving camera which follows the characters up and down a Parisian boulevard.
- As she narrates, a man, about twenty, nonchalantly exits his apartment and strolls down a Parisian boulevard completely naked (the double take of a passing motorcyclist is hilarious).
noun pəˈrɪzɪənpəˈriʒən A native or inhabitant of Paris. 巴黎人,巴黎居民 Example sentencesExamples - This well-written and interesting book explores the Parisians and their city, linking them to the revolution and later developments.
- Perhaps they could take lessons from the Parisians, who have shopping down to a fine art.
- They greet me at first with the ferocious expressions of all urban children, so much so that I begin to suspect my own motives: am I just another voyeuristic Parisian on suburban safari?
- The fortysomething couple were perfectly dressed for a Paris weekend - chinos, sporty anoraks - but clearly not equipped to meet the Parisians.
- On the top of the viaduct, to my surprise I found a leafy pedestrian boulevard down which lots of Parisians were taking an afternoon walk.
- Ferguson might not be ready to give up on the 25-year-old Parisian, who had a brief spell on loan at Newcastle in 1999, but is considering other options.
- The curly-haired, dark-eyed young Parisian who made the tall, blonde Elisabeth abandon Germany is still visible in the successful, mature painter, and he knows it.
- The usual role assigned to Manet is as the father of impressionism - because of his genius for annoying respectable Parisians and those flashing fencer's brush strokes of his.
- The challenges he has set are designed to amaze, but if they do not come off, the 47-year-old Parisian will not be the only one to get the slow hand-clap.
- More than 100 years after Londoners got the Tube and Parisians a Metro, Dubliners are set to get their own underground public transport system.
- With Parisians, the less conspicuous you are, the better.
- For several years I wondered whether the ring hit some unfortunate Parisian out for a late afternoon stroll, but finally decided I was safe from capture and arrest.
- How would you like to sweep through the centre of Paris with a police motorbike escort stopping the traffic, and the oh-so-cool Parisians lining the pavements to cheer your passing?
- I think that for a lot of people who think Parisians are rude, it's because they don't speak the language.
- The French still top the list of tourists in Mauritius, so it is no surprise to find cuisine that will satisfy even the most pernickety Parisian.
- The Parisians have this quality not found in the English speaking world: the ability to be both really chic and really laid back at the same time.
- He is a dapper, self-confident man, and in between cutting slices of steak he makes it clear that he is worried by the influx of Brits - and, perhaps worse, Parisians.
- Oozing charm, the 55-year-old Parisian beckons me to take a seat and immediately launches into sales pitch mode.
- Thousands of Parisians traditionally collect on the tree-lined boulevard in the centre of the French capital on New Year's Eve.
- My French aunt reports that a Quebecois movie showing in Paris was subtitled because the accent was so difficult for the Parisians to understand.
OriginLate Middle English: from French parisien. RhymesElysian, Frisian, Tunisian Definition of Parisian in US English: ParisianadjectivepəˈriʒənpəˈrēZHən Relating to Paris. (与)巴黎(有关)的 Example sentencesExamples - There's only so much you can do to make any part of Hackney look like a Parisian boulevard, especially just after you've got up.
- How gleeful, internally that is, were we to post about the new cleanly chic Parisian coffee shop we discovered a few days ago on 2nd Avenue in the East Village.
- As she narrates, a man, about twenty, nonchalantly exits his apartment and strolls down a Parisian boulevard completely naked (the double take of a passing motorcyclist is hilarious).
- In return she thought him ‘a typical Parisian boulevard product’.
- The film had a lot of thrilling camera work, especially the scene immediately following the deaf-children prologue, the long-take, roving camera which follows the characters up and down a Parisian boulevard.
- Many a well-to-do lady demanded her own dog of the Parisian boulevards.
- Many of the buildings have taken a direct influence from Parisian architecture, and like Paris, the skyscrapers seem to lie around the city's edges.
- You know how big and wide the main Parisian boulevards are?
- We soon discover he also has highly honed fighting reflexes, a knowledge of maps, weapons and telecommunications, and can drive a car at high speed through Parisian traffic with dazzling virtuosity.
- It was clear that the Parisian populace preferred the boulevard theatre, cabarets, and café-concerts.
- The city's ethos doesn't provide an obvious method of attack; there's no Amsterdam coffee houses, Parisian cafes, or British pubs.
- The houses are built stoutly of granite and the mile-long main street is as broad as a Parisian boulevard.
- A North American deal has finally clicked for this Parisian trio (Heaven's Dust is actually a good two years old), so now we'll see if they click with a North American audience.
- Spices come in many colors at Parisian farmer's markets.
- The Post Office had organised a street party, the weather was fine and, for an hour or two, village street was more like a Parisian boulevard with wine and cheese and accordion music.
- Golden arches have a presence on Parisian streets.
- The tree-lined boulevards are populated by ultra-expensive Rodeo Drive and Parisian boutiques.
- The play is lurid and sadomasochistic, the delight of Parisian decadents at the time, but slow, obvious, and overdone, as Wilde always was whenever he wrote tragedy.
- It did not help matters that she would follow her sentences with a deep sniff, as if expecting to engage in an obnoxious breathing contest with Parisian intellectuals.
- There is no ‘death of the author’ (that Parisian cliché) in my world view.
nounpəˈriʒənpəˈrēZHən A native or inhabitant of Paris. 巴黎人,巴黎居民 Example sentencesExamples - They greet me at first with the ferocious expressions of all urban children, so much so that I begin to suspect my own motives: am I just another voyeuristic Parisian on suburban safari?
- This well-written and interesting book explores the Parisians and their city, linking them to the revolution and later developments.
- The fortysomething couple were perfectly dressed for a Paris weekend - chinos, sporty anoraks - but clearly not equipped to meet the Parisians.
- Ferguson might not be ready to give up on the 25-year-old Parisian, who had a brief spell on loan at Newcastle in 1999, but is considering other options.
- How would you like to sweep through the centre of Paris with a police motorbike escort stopping the traffic, and the oh-so-cool Parisians lining the pavements to cheer your passing?
- The usual role assigned to Manet is as the father of impressionism - because of his genius for annoying respectable Parisians and those flashing fencer's brush strokes of his.
- The curly-haired, dark-eyed young Parisian who made the tall, blonde Elisabeth abandon Germany is still visible in the successful, mature painter, and he knows it.
- The French still top the list of tourists in Mauritius, so it is no surprise to find cuisine that will satisfy even the most pernickety Parisian.
- On the top of the viaduct, to my surprise I found a leafy pedestrian boulevard down which lots of Parisians were taking an afternoon walk.
- He is a dapper, self-confident man, and in between cutting slices of steak he makes it clear that he is worried by the influx of Brits - and, perhaps worse, Parisians.
- The challenges he has set are designed to amaze, but if they do not come off, the 47-year-old Parisian will not be the only one to get the slow hand-clap.
- Oozing charm, the 55-year-old Parisian beckons me to take a seat and immediately launches into sales pitch mode.
- More than 100 years after Londoners got the Tube and Parisians a Metro, Dubliners are set to get their own underground public transport system.
- Thousands of Parisians traditionally collect on the tree-lined boulevard in the centre of the French capital on New Year's Eve.
- I think that for a lot of people who think Parisians are rude, it's because they don't speak the language.
- With Parisians, the less conspicuous you are, the better.
- For several years I wondered whether the ring hit some unfortunate Parisian out for a late afternoon stroll, but finally decided I was safe from capture and arrest.
- The Parisians have this quality not found in the English speaking world: the ability to be both really chic and really laid back at the same time.
- Perhaps they could take lessons from the Parisians, who have shopping down to a fine art.
- My French aunt reports that a Quebecois movie showing in Paris was subtitled because the accent was so difficult for the Parisians to understand.
OriginLate Middle English: from French parisien. |