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词汇 Scandinavian
释义

Definition of Scandinavian in English:

Scandinavian

adjective skandɪˈneɪvɪənˌskændəˈneɪviən
  • Relating to Scandinavia, its people, or their languages.

    (与)斯堪的纳维亚(有关)的;(与)斯堪的纳维亚人(有关)的;(与)斯堪的纳维亚语(有关)的

    Example sentencesExamples
    • We've played pre-season a few times against Scandinavian teams and they are big guys and very physical.
    • The word came into the Gaelic language as an old Scandinavian word.
    • Viking invasions a few centuries later brought Scandinavian languages to the British Isles, while the Norman invasion in 1066 introduced French.
    • For Norway, as it is with most other Scandinavian countries, human rights has become a major foreign policy issue, at times even the defining issue around which other aspects of bilateral relations are built.
    • Scores of Yorkshire dialect words have remarkably similar counterparts in modern Scandinavian languages.
    • But in the last few months there has been a noticeable increase of listeners logging on in various parts of South Africa, the Far East, Scandinavian countries and of course all over Europe.
    • He had reason to be sheepish, as his own favoured Scandinavian compatriots had been bombed out at an earlier stage even than Scotland, and because the process had done his organisation's reputation no favours.
    • Gorgeous views of valleys and forests are a perfect backdrop to the ‘Chalet’ huts designed in Scandinavian style and here you can easily slip into the storybook romance of yesteryears.
    • The US, Canada and several Scandinavian countries are already signed up to the scheme, and refugee workers hope that Britain's move would encourage the rest of the European Union to join.
    • Listening back to the tape of our conversation, I'm struck by the language he uses when talking about how Scandinavian countries serve as a model for an independent Scotland.
    • These ships provide saunas, indoor swimming, Jacuzzis, delectable Scandinavian buffets, and a la carte restaurants featuring steaks and seafood.
    • This process was taking place at the same time that Scandinavian banks were expanding into the Baltic, and those of Austria into the territories of the former Austro-Hungarian empire.
    • The first three floors are devoted to what the hotel calls its ‘Nordic’ rooms, which, given the chain's Scandinavian antecedents and ownership, are its flagship rooms.
    • The Scandinavian languages of the Viking settlers penetrated much more deeply into English vocabulary, syntax, morphology, and phonology.
    • The Battle of Stamford Bridge and the Rout of Riccall of 1066 will be brought to life during the festival and, as a new focus for this year, the final week will feature new events exploring aspects of Scandinavian culture.
    • A bit of Scandinavian modesty might have seen the family through.
    • But as the men's 100 metres heats got underway under azure skies and in clean Scandinavian air, there was little of the electricity in the atmosphere usually associated with the start of a championships.
    • Bascially I'll eat my hat (and it's a really cool fedora so I don't really want to eat it) if Clark tries any Scandinavian style social or political engineering on us.
    • Many celebrations were halted to hold a minute's silence, traditional firework displays in Scandinavian countries were cancelled, and black cloth was draped along Paris's Champs-Elysées.
    • Sweden were similarly untroubled during their qualifying campaign and offer the type of athletic, organised, and experienced Scandinavian opposition against which England traditionally struggle.
noun skandɪˈneɪvɪənˌskændəˈneɪviən
  • 1A native or inhabitant of Scandinavia, or a person of Scandinavian descent.

    斯堪的纳维亚人;斯堪的纳维亚人后裔

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Most of the raiders were Danes, but the common tongue of the Scandinavians enabled them all to work together.
    • The Dutch and early English merchants created a gateway town that became a melting pot of Germans, Jews, Scandinavians, and Africans.
    • Americans, Germans, Scandinavians, British and Australians come in a stream all year round.
    • Father met mother out here - she was a New Zealand-born Scandinavian.
    • They were Europeans, Scandinavians, Americans and those that outnumbered the rest were Spanish.
    • The Russians, Scandinavians, and Swiss, in contrast, all gather wild mushrooms with great enthusiasm, thronging the woods every autumn.
    • Kenneth raided Northumbria repeatedly, but his kingdom suffered assaults from the Britons of Strathclyde as well as Scandinavians.
    • So it was that only two of the Europeans, both Scandinavians, registered singles wins.
    • The range of gadgets and gizmos is practical rather than eye dazzling, pretty much as you expect from a very practical Scandinavian.
    • Buyers included Scandinavians, Americans and British who were converting the former livestock farms to game that traditionally roamed the region.
    • The rest of the Scandinavians and the Spanish are getting to know it.
    • Most evidence for slavery in the Viking Age refers to Scandinavians as slave traders but not as slaveholders in their own society.
    • They were known as the Scandinavians, or Norse people.
    • Icelandic and Faroese, however, are no longer immediately intelligible to other Scandinavians, even though they retain many features of original Scandinavian.
    • Six of the 12-strong European team are Scandinavians, and they all played their part.
    • The north polar domain has been explored and developed by Canada and the USA, by the British and Scandinavians, and by the Russians.
    • However, since it was mainly Europeans and Scandinavians that visited and stayed in St. Petersburg, it was disturbing.
    • Along with other Scandinavians, Swedes celebrate the summer solstice, or Midsummer's Day, on June 21.
    • The Scandinavians, Swiss, and French were particularly quick to see this.
    • Their placings are seen as sure signs that the Celts and Scandinavians were stitched up by a central and eastern European alliance.
  • 2mass noun The northern branch of the Germanic languages, comprising Danish, Norwegian, Swedish, Icelandic, and Faroese, all descended from Old Norse.

    斯堪的纳维亚语族(包括丹麦语、挪威语、瑞典语、冰岛语和法罗语),北日耳曼语族

    Example sentencesExamples
    • A common language can be French, Scandinavian, Swahili whatever, and does not have to be English so the change proposed should actually be an improvement in the French eyes.
    • They included papers in English, German, and Scandinavian.
    • Er, no, sorry, he actually said: ‘I am a Viking,’ in guttural Scandinavian.
    • It meant nothing, it was just fake German or fake Scandinavian or something..

Rhymes

avian, Batavian, Flavian, Moldavian, Moravian, Octavian, Shavian

Definition of Scandinavian in US English:

Scandinavian

adjectiveˌskændəˈneɪviənˌskandəˈnāvēən
  • Relating to Scandinavia, its people, or their languages.

    (与)斯堪的纳维亚(有关)的;(与)斯堪的纳维亚人(有关)的;(与)斯堪的纳维亚语(有关)的

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The Battle of Stamford Bridge and the Rout of Riccall of 1066 will be brought to life during the festival and, as a new focus for this year, the final week will feature new events exploring aspects of Scandinavian culture.
    • The US, Canada and several Scandinavian countries are already signed up to the scheme, and refugee workers hope that Britain's move would encourage the rest of the European Union to join.
    • But as the men's 100 metres heats got underway under azure skies and in clean Scandinavian air, there was little of the electricity in the atmosphere usually associated with the start of a championships.
    • He had reason to be sheepish, as his own favoured Scandinavian compatriots had been bombed out at an earlier stage even than Scotland, and because the process had done his organisation's reputation no favours.
    • A bit of Scandinavian modesty might have seen the family through.
    • The word came into the Gaelic language as an old Scandinavian word.
    • But in the last few months there has been a noticeable increase of listeners logging on in various parts of South Africa, the Far East, Scandinavian countries and of course all over Europe.
    • Many celebrations were halted to hold a minute's silence, traditional firework displays in Scandinavian countries were cancelled, and black cloth was draped along Paris's Champs-Elysées.
    • Bascially I'll eat my hat (and it's a really cool fedora so I don't really want to eat it) if Clark tries any Scandinavian style social or political engineering on us.
    • Gorgeous views of valleys and forests are a perfect backdrop to the ‘Chalet’ huts designed in Scandinavian style and here you can easily slip into the storybook romance of yesteryears.
    • This process was taking place at the same time that Scandinavian banks were expanding into the Baltic, and those of Austria into the territories of the former Austro-Hungarian empire.
    • The first three floors are devoted to what the hotel calls its ‘Nordic’ rooms, which, given the chain's Scandinavian antecedents and ownership, are its flagship rooms.
    • These ships provide saunas, indoor swimming, Jacuzzis, delectable Scandinavian buffets, and a la carte restaurants featuring steaks and seafood.
    • Scores of Yorkshire dialect words have remarkably similar counterparts in modern Scandinavian languages.
    • Sweden were similarly untroubled during their qualifying campaign and offer the type of athletic, organised, and experienced Scandinavian opposition against which England traditionally struggle.
    • Viking invasions a few centuries later brought Scandinavian languages to the British Isles, while the Norman invasion in 1066 introduced French.
    • The Scandinavian languages of the Viking settlers penetrated much more deeply into English vocabulary, syntax, morphology, and phonology.
    • Listening back to the tape of our conversation, I'm struck by the language he uses when talking about how Scandinavian countries serve as a model for an independent Scotland.
    • We've played pre-season a few times against Scandinavian teams and they are big guys and very physical.
    • For Norway, as it is with most other Scandinavian countries, human rights has become a major foreign policy issue, at times even the defining issue around which other aspects of bilateral relations are built.
nounˌskændəˈneɪviənˌskandəˈnāvēən
  • 1A native or inhabitant of Scandinavia, or a person of Scandinavian descent.

    斯堪的纳维亚人;斯堪的纳维亚人后裔

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Kenneth raided Northumbria repeatedly, but his kingdom suffered assaults from the Britons of Strathclyde as well as Scandinavians.
    • Six of the 12-strong European team are Scandinavians, and they all played their part.
    • They were known as the Scandinavians, or Norse people.
    • Icelandic and Faroese, however, are no longer immediately intelligible to other Scandinavians, even though they retain many features of original Scandinavian.
    • The rest of the Scandinavians and the Spanish are getting to know it.
    • The Dutch and early English merchants created a gateway town that became a melting pot of Germans, Jews, Scandinavians, and Africans.
    • Their placings are seen as sure signs that the Celts and Scandinavians were stitched up by a central and eastern European alliance.
    • Americans, Germans, Scandinavians, British and Australians come in a stream all year round.
    • Most of the raiders were Danes, but the common tongue of the Scandinavians enabled them all to work together.
    • The Scandinavians, Swiss, and French were particularly quick to see this.
    • Most evidence for slavery in the Viking Age refers to Scandinavians as slave traders but not as slaveholders in their own society.
    • However, since it was mainly Europeans and Scandinavians that visited and stayed in St. Petersburg, it was disturbing.
    • So it was that only two of the Europeans, both Scandinavians, registered singles wins.
    • Along with other Scandinavians, Swedes celebrate the summer solstice, or Midsummer's Day, on June 21.
    • The north polar domain has been explored and developed by Canada and the USA, by the British and Scandinavians, and by the Russians.
    • They were Europeans, Scandinavians, Americans and those that outnumbered the rest were Spanish.
    • Buyers included Scandinavians, Americans and British who were converting the former livestock farms to game that traditionally roamed the region.
    • The range of gadgets and gizmos is practical rather than eye dazzling, pretty much as you expect from a very practical Scandinavian.
    • The Russians, Scandinavians, and Swiss, in contrast, all gather wild mushrooms with great enthusiasm, thronging the woods every autumn.
    • Father met mother out here - she was a New Zealand-born Scandinavian.
  • 2The North Germanic languages (Danish, Norwegian, Swedish, Icelandic, Faroese) descended from Old Norse.

    斯堪的纳维亚语族(包括丹麦语、挪威语、瑞典语、冰岛语和法罗语),北日耳曼语族

    Example sentencesExamples
    • A common language can be French, Scandinavian, Swahili whatever, and does not have to be English so the change proposed should actually be an improvement in the French eyes.
    • They included papers in English, German, and Scandinavian.
    • Er, no, sorry, he actually said: ‘I am a Viking,’ in guttural Scandinavian.
    • It meant nothing, it was just fake German or fake Scandinavian or something..
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