释义 |
Definition of showplace in English: showplacenoun ˈʃəʊpleɪsˈʃoʊˌpleɪs A place of beauty or interest attracting many visitors. 旅游胜地 Example sentencesExamples - Last year the bunker on Reinhart Street, inaccessible until 1990, was opened as a showplace for street artists.
- Nearly 400 people crammed into Harlem's Studio Museum, an impressive showplace for the work of black artists just a stone's throw from the legendary Apollo Theater, for the glitzy party my publisher threw for the launch of my latest book.
- The man seen by many as Enemy No.1 of the environment has built a showplace of ecological sensitivity.
- Now that the Premiership is a global showplace, all that's changed.
- He and Margo didn't set out to create a showplace.
- The U.S. Federal Wind Energy Program was created at that time, and California became a showplace for large-scale wind farms.
- Physically fit, mentally strong and confident before a crowd, they challenge themselves in the showplace while extending that winning attitude into every area of their lives.
- In 1931, he opened the Hotel Hatcher on Main Street in Pikeville and it became known as one of the showplaces of the Big Sandy river region.
- Male bowerbirds famously woo females by fashioning elaborate bowers - not nests but U-shaped showplaces with parallel walls of twigs.
- She testified that she wrote what would be of interest to her readers, the opening of a showplace for items of interest to decorators and homemakers.
- Konya was a showplace of Turkish architecture, with a collection of mosques and schools that made the city a rival of Istanbul and Bursa.
- Frank called from the ranch last week to say that they've put the showplace on the market, opting to move full-time to their nearby bay house.
- What of Yurunga Homestead, the heritage showplace of the town?
- Servers handed out hard hats to the 130 guests as they trekked into the manse, expected to be a showplace once the final paintings are hung.
- The memorial must not be a showplace of artistic ego.
Definition of showplace in US English: showplacenounˈSHōˌplāsˈʃoʊˌpleɪs A place of beauty or interest attracting many visitors. 旅游胜地 Example sentencesExamples - The U.S. Federal Wind Energy Program was created at that time, and California became a showplace for large-scale wind farms.
- What of Yurunga Homestead, the heritage showplace of the town?
- The memorial must not be a showplace of artistic ego.
- She testified that she wrote what would be of interest to her readers, the opening of a showplace for items of interest to decorators and homemakers.
- He and Margo didn't set out to create a showplace.
- Frank called from the ranch last week to say that they've put the showplace on the market, opting to move full-time to their nearby bay house.
- Physically fit, mentally strong and confident before a crowd, they challenge themselves in the showplace while extending that winning attitude into every area of their lives.
- The man seen by many as Enemy No.1 of the environment has built a showplace of ecological sensitivity.
- Konya was a showplace of Turkish architecture, with a collection of mosques and schools that made the city a rival of Istanbul and Bursa.
- Now that the Premiership is a global showplace, all that's changed.
- In 1931, he opened the Hotel Hatcher on Main Street in Pikeville and it became known as one of the showplaces of the Big Sandy river region.
- Last year the bunker on Reinhart Street, inaccessible until 1990, was opened as a showplace for street artists.
- Nearly 400 people crammed into Harlem's Studio Museum, an impressive showplace for the work of black artists just a stone's throw from the legendary Apollo Theater, for the glitzy party my publisher threw for the launch of my latest book.
- Male bowerbirds famously woo females by fashioning elaborate bowers - not nests but U-shaped showplaces with parallel walls of twigs.
- Servers handed out hard hats to the 130 guests as they trekked into the manse, expected to be a showplace once the final paintings are hung.
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