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词汇 rosette
释义

Definition of rosette in English:

rosette

noun rə(ʊ)ˈzɛtroʊˈzɛt
  • 1A rose-shaped decoration, typically made of ribbon, worn by supporters of a sports team or political party or awarded as a prize.

    (尤指由丝带制成,运动队或政党的支持者或比赛获胜者佩带的)玫瑰花形饰物

    the showjumping rosettes Samantha had accumulated
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Monday 7 May 1945: When I went downtown, all the shops had got their rosettes and tricoloured button-holes in the windows and men putting up lengths of little pennants and flags.
    • I graciously accepted the rosette and belt buckle, thanking the ring steward as I rode out and the applause trickled down.
    • By about midnight it became noticeable that those wearing Conservative rosettes looked a bit anxious.
    • Mr Wood, who visited Petrus and got involved in an argument with the staff, wanted the restaurant to be given only four rosettes describing it as an ‘expensive poseur's restaurant’.
    • Rosario's embroidered and ornamented sashes with ribbon rosettes for an imagined Miss Brazil, Miss Amazon and Miss France hang from standards nearby.
    • Anyway, she was friendly enough and let me linger in the corridor admiring the many rosettes she has won for her chickens.
    • The prize was decorated with silk rosettes, fruit and small stuffed birds.
    • There was a pause as Jenelle came out and received her rosette.
    • He, too, was a champion, and his rosettes as well as his presence brightened the study where Mary Eccles spent much of her time.
    • ‘It's been a great day for democracy,’ said one of Robinson's team as he adjusted his rosette.
    • Another attraction at the Royal Show, also competing for rosettes and prize cards are over thirty pure breeds of poultry, exhibiting in the Poultry Marquee on the first three days of the show and followed by a poultry display on the fourth.
    • I even phoned up the AA guide to let them know about it and they have now given Malik's two rosettes.
    • Rival candidates sought to display their strength by adorning the streets and their supporters with banners and rosettes.
    • During his five years at the chic restaurant in Gloucestershire he picked up a Michelin Star and four rosettes from the AA Restaurant Guide.
    • So, I talked to the GIF officers and showed them my rosette.
    • The rosettes on the hips, pompons on the tail and puffs on the leg all reflect the frivolity of the French aristocracy, and have been kept by breeders who wish to preserve the dog's historic tradition.
    • The campaign strategy of the Tories, when not completely off the wall, shows a neurotic obsession with retaining the votes of a certain elderly constituency who would vote for anything with a blue rosette.
    • Just a smattering of grooms and judges and the salmon-hatted wives of supermarket sponsors waiting to hand out rosettes watch with a wake-like reverence.
    • The restaurant has three red rosettes in the AA Guide, and the cuisine is classical with modern influences.
    • Their efforts were rewarded when, fifteen minutes later, Blossom took the blue rosette for ‘Best Jersey Heifer’.
    • Antony Worrall Thompson who was demonstrating in the food hall later in the day was exhibiting his Middle White pigs for the first time and beginners luck was with him, for he was presented with a second prize rosette.
    Synonyms
    ribbon, badge
  • 2An object or arrangement resembling a rose.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Several of these pieces of furniture share characteristics of both groups, such as a hanging cupboard with grain-painted sides and a green front with yellow rosettes, and a grain-painted chest of drawers with rosettes.
    • The elastic waistband has a decorative rosette and stretches easily.
    • By the next visit, the same cupcake was shipshape, standing proudly beneath its smooth buttercream rosettes and colored sprinkles, its size approaching that of a globe artichoke.
    • The doorknobs' roses or rosettes are simply cast and machined brass discs with a ribbed outside border having a three-inch diameter, twice the size of the normal knob rose.
    • It was perfect, with precise, even planes and a stamped-out whipped-cream rosette.
    • Designed with a center emphasis, the fabrics are arranged in rings of hexagons, with four additional rosettes in the corners.
    • The coffin would probably have been painted possibly with rosettes signifying prosperity in the after-life.
    • Detail of the hexagon Charm quilt, shows the center rosette of the quilt.
    • Pipe the butter into 24 rosettes onto a parchment-lined sheet pan and set aside in the refrigerator.
    • (I'm told that the rag rosette was Leah's touch to hid a coffee stain on the tee-shirt).
    • But best of all was a chilled broth constructed around delicate slivers of Maine Peeky Toe crab and a green rosette of avocado.
    • And the black dress on the right with the rosettes, it is beautiful!
    • The garlands are all bell-shaped, wooden-framed and covered in paper rosettes sewn into place.
    • For example, the dark blue triangles on the pink background of the rosettes are barely perceptible in the old photograph and may be missed entirely if the viewer is not aware of the value shift.
    • On the floor in the center is a dazzling blue sequin-filled rosette.
    • Nickel-finish conchas normally used to decorate Western wear form rosettes when they're anchored on leather circles and tied with turquoise leather thread.
    • Decorate each rosette center with one gold seed bead.
    • The inlay elements are symmetrically organized into three concentric bands of antithetical animal groups surrounding a central rosette.
    • These night tables were often decorated with the characteristic Neapolitan rosettes highlighted with ivory inlay.
    • A rosette of chopped vegetables sat in the middle of the bowl, buried under a pedestal of fresh lobster, which collapsed back into the broth when you tweaked it with your spoon.
    1. 2.1Architecture A carved or moulded ornament resembling or representing a rose.
      〔建筑〕圆花饰;圆花窗
      some stone friezes carved with rosettes
      Example sentencesExamples
      • They can also be combined with a rosette and used to decorate an otherwise plain ceiling.
      • Upon entering the hall from the gallery of the rotunda, the viewer faced the elevated rostrum of the speaker at the south end, located under an arch that featured coffers filled with plaster rosettes.
      • Traditionally there was a decorative rosette around the hole.
      • The front door leads into a rotunda with a domed ceiling decorated with rosettes in the coffers.
      • Among them are the carved rosette and floral vines emanating from the crest along the upper stiles, the five curved slats with leafage and fish-scale carving, and the pendant rosettes on the front legs.
      • He will also reproduce period fireplace surrounds, ceiling rosettes, and freestanding carvings in the manner of Grinling Gibbons.
    2. 2.2Biology A marking or group of markings resembling a rose.
      〔生〕玫瑰花结
      on the greater part of the body the spots are grouped in rosettes
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Looking down at her, I admire the black rosettes of her spots against the snow-white beauty of her fur.
      • Bengt had always been very proud of her cat's spotted fur, which was shiny and brown with large red-copper rosettes outlined in dark-gray.
      • On a visit to a zoo in Delhi, India, in 1980, Mill spotted a feral, orange domestic cat with deep brown rosettes that lived in the rhinoceros compound and earned its keep as a ratter.
      • Thick stripes and spots covered his altered body, making it seem like a combination between the lines Jyfe had exhibited and the rosettes of a jaguar.
    3. 2.3 A radial arrangement of horizontally spreading leaves at the base of a low-growing plant.
      莲座(叶)丛;莲座状;丛生,簇生
      a large rosette of basal leaves
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Smooth leaves form a rosette at the base, which flower stems rise up to 12 inches above.
      • Harvest most of the rosettes but let a few flowers form seeds; mache self-sows readily, so next year's crop is likely to seed itself.
      • Young plants, with small leaves surrounding the central rosette, are best.
      • In mild climates, the plant will maintain a low rosette of leaves and can be picked through the winter.
      • These plants are frequently monocarpic, their rosettes usually dying after flowering.
      • They have low spreading rosettes of leaves numbering from six to twenty.
      • These form rosettes of waxy evergreen leaves and star-shaped summer flowers.
      • Apply herbicides when plants are in the rosette stage and prior to bolting.
      • The plant is succulent with leaves in tight rosettes more or less four centimetres or more across in diameter.
      • If you want more of this beauty, you'll have to divide the rosettes in spring or take stem or root cuttings in summer, as it doesn't come true from seed.
      • Most are plants growing in a stemless rosette of leaves, sometimes referred to as a tank or cup.
      • Hyacinth bloom buds should have come up far enough to show in the heart of the leaf rosette before you bring the pots into the light.
      • Dark green leaves arranged in rosettes cover the ground at a rapid rate, and stems clad in bright yellow bracts illuminate the spring garden.
      • The key to good control of musk thistle with herbicides is to control young plants in early May while they're in the rosette stage.
      • This jewel of a vegetable with its rosette of bluish-red leaves has great visual appeal - both in the kitchen and the garden.
      • Long, sturdy, round flower stems develop from the leaf rosette starting in May.
      • As soon as the second-year plants set seed and die, that seed germinates into pretty new rosettes that quickly monopolize light, moisture, nutrients, soil, and space.
      • Their sturdy stems, topped with 4-to 5-inch-wide blooms, rise from rosettes of dark green, wavy-edged leaves.
      • Plants form a tight rosette of leaves, not a long blocky head.
      • You will probably see a rosette of fresh new leaves just waiting to emerge.
    4. 2.4 A rose diamond.
      玫瑰花形琢型的钻石
      three large round rosettes put together using table cut diamonds set in silvered gold

Derivatives

  • rosetted

  • adjective
    • I was trying to find out how easy it would be to buy a beautiful rosetted ‘tiger’ pelt that has cost so many jaguars their lives but which on the black market would fetch a paltry $400.

Origin

Mid 18th century: from French, diminutive of rose (see rose1).

Rhymes

abet, aiguillette, anisette, Annette, Antoinette, arête, Arlette, ate, baguette, banquette, barbette, barrette, basinet, bassinet, beget, Bernadette, beset, bet, Bette, blanquette, Brett, briquette, brochette, brunette (US brunet), Burnett, cadet, caravanette, cassette, castanet, charette, cigarette (US cigaret), clarinet, Claudette, Colette, coquette, corvette, couchette, courgette, croquette, curette, curvet, Debrett, debt, dinette, diskette, duet, epaulette (US epaulet), flageolet, flannelette, forget, fret, galette, gazette, Georgette, get, godet, grisette, heavyset, Jeanette, jet, kitchenette, La Fayette, landaulet, launderette, layette, lazaret, leatherette, let, Lett, lorgnette, luncheonette, lunette, Lynette, maisonette, majorette, maquette, Marie-Antoinette, marionette, Marquette, marquisette, martinet, met, minaret, minuet, moquette, motet, musette, Nanette, net, noisette, nonet, novelette, nymphet, octet, Odette, on-set, oubliette, Paulette, pet, Phuket, picquet, pillaret, pincette, pipette, piquet, pirouette, planchette, pochette, quartet, quickset, quintet, regret, ret, Rhett, roomette, roulette, satinette, septet, serviette, sestet, set, sett, sextet, silhouette, soubrette, spinet, spinneret, statuette, stet, stockinet, sublet, suffragette, Suzette, sweat, thickset, threat, Tibet, toilette, tret, underlet, upset, usherette, vedette, vet, vignette, vinaigrette, wagonette, wet, whet, winceyette, yet, Yvette

Definition of rosette in US English:

rosette

nounroʊˈzɛtrōˈzet
  • 1A rose-shaped decoration, typically made of ribbon and awarded to winners of a competition.

    (尤指由丝带制成,运动队或政党的支持者或比赛获胜者佩带的)玫瑰花形饰物

    the showjumping rosettes Samantha had accumulated
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Rival candidates sought to display their strength by adorning the streets and their supporters with banners and rosettes.
    • There was a pause as Jenelle came out and received her rosette.
    • The restaurant has three red rosettes in the AA Guide, and the cuisine is classical with modern influences.
    • Anyway, she was friendly enough and let me linger in the corridor admiring the many rosettes she has won for her chickens.
    • During his five years at the chic restaurant in Gloucestershire he picked up a Michelin Star and four rosettes from the AA Restaurant Guide.
    • He, too, was a champion, and his rosettes as well as his presence brightened the study where Mary Eccles spent much of her time.
    • Rosario's embroidered and ornamented sashes with ribbon rosettes for an imagined Miss Brazil, Miss Amazon and Miss France hang from standards nearby.
    • The prize was decorated with silk rosettes, fruit and small stuffed birds.
    • I even phoned up the AA guide to let them know about it and they have now given Malik's two rosettes.
    • So, I talked to the GIF officers and showed them my rosette.
    • Monday 7 May 1945: When I went downtown, all the shops had got their rosettes and tricoloured button-holes in the windows and men putting up lengths of little pennants and flags.
    • Another attraction at the Royal Show, also competing for rosettes and prize cards are over thirty pure breeds of poultry, exhibiting in the Poultry Marquee on the first three days of the show and followed by a poultry display on the fourth.
    • I graciously accepted the rosette and belt buckle, thanking the ring steward as I rode out and the applause trickled down.
    • By about midnight it became noticeable that those wearing Conservative rosettes looked a bit anxious.
    • Mr Wood, who visited Petrus and got involved in an argument with the staff, wanted the restaurant to be given only four rosettes describing it as an ‘expensive poseur's restaurant’.
    • Just a smattering of grooms and judges and the salmon-hatted wives of supermarket sponsors waiting to hand out rosettes watch with a wake-like reverence.
    • Their efforts were rewarded when, fifteen minutes later, Blossom took the blue rosette for ‘Best Jersey Heifer’.
    • ‘It's been a great day for democracy,’ said one of Robinson's team as he adjusted his rosette.
    • The campaign strategy of the Tories, when not completely off the wall, shows a neurotic obsession with retaining the votes of a certain elderly constituency who would vote for anything with a blue rosette.
    • The rosettes on the hips, pompons on the tail and puffs on the leg all reflect the frivolity of the French aristocracy, and have been kept by breeders who wish to preserve the dog's historic tradition.
    • Antony Worrall Thompson who was demonstrating in the food hall later in the day was exhibiting his Middle White pigs for the first time and beginners luck was with him, for he was presented with a second prize rosette.
    Synonyms
    ribbon, badge
  • 2A design, arrangement, or growth resembling a rose.

    玫瑰花形图案(或排列,生长物),尤指

    Example sentencesExamples
    • These night tables were often decorated with the characteristic Neapolitan rosettes highlighted with ivory inlay.
    • (I'm told that the rag rosette was Leah's touch to hid a coffee stain on the tee-shirt).
    • By the next visit, the same cupcake was shipshape, standing proudly beneath its smooth buttercream rosettes and colored sprinkles, its size approaching that of a globe artichoke.
    • It was perfect, with precise, even planes and a stamped-out whipped-cream rosette.
    • The inlay elements are symmetrically organized into three concentric bands of antithetical animal groups surrounding a central rosette.
    • But best of all was a chilled broth constructed around delicate slivers of Maine Peeky Toe crab and a green rosette of avocado.
    • On the floor in the center is a dazzling blue sequin-filled rosette.
    • A rosette of chopped vegetables sat in the middle of the bowl, buried under a pedestal of fresh lobster, which collapsed back into the broth when you tweaked it with your spoon.
    • Decorate each rosette center with one gold seed bead.
    • The garlands are all bell-shaped, wooden-framed and covered in paper rosettes sewn into place.
    • The coffin would probably have been painted possibly with rosettes signifying prosperity in the after-life.
    • For example, the dark blue triangles on the pink background of the rosettes are barely perceptible in the old photograph and may be missed entirely if the viewer is not aware of the value shift.
    • Detail of the hexagon Charm quilt, shows the center rosette of the quilt.
    • Nickel-finish conchas normally used to decorate Western wear form rosettes when they're anchored on leather circles and tied with turquoise leather thread.
    • Designed with a center emphasis, the fabrics are arranged in rings of hexagons, with four additional rosettes in the corners.
    • Several of these pieces of furniture share characteristics of both groups, such as a hanging cupboard with grain-painted sides and a green front with yellow rosettes, and a grain-painted chest of drawers with rosettes.
    • And the black dress on the right with the rosettes, it is beautiful!
    • Pipe the butter into 24 rosettes onto a parchment-lined sheet pan and set aside in the refrigerator.
    • The doorknobs' roses or rosettes are simply cast and machined brass discs with a ribbed outside border having a three-inch diameter, twice the size of the normal knob rose.
    • The elastic waistband has a decorative rosette and stretches easily.
    1. 2.1Architecture A carved or molded ornament resembling or representing a rose.
      〔建筑〕圆花饰;圆花窗
      some stone friezes carved with rosettes
      Example sentencesExamples
      • He will also reproduce period fireplace surrounds, ceiling rosettes, and freestanding carvings in the manner of Grinling Gibbons.
      • Upon entering the hall from the gallery of the rotunda, the viewer faced the elevated rostrum of the speaker at the south end, located under an arch that featured coffers filled with plaster rosettes.
      • Among them are the carved rosette and floral vines emanating from the crest along the upper stiles, the five curved slats with leafage and fish-scale carving, and the pendant rosettes on the front legs.
      • The front door leads into a rotunda with a domed ceiling decorated with rosettes in the coffers.
      • They can also be combined with a rosette and used to decorate an otherwise plain ceiling.
      • Traditionally there was a decorative rosette around the hole.
    2. 2.2Biology A marking or group of markings resembling a rose.
      〔生〕玫瑰花结
      on the greater part of the body the spots are grouped in rosettes
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Looking down at her, I admire the black rosettes of her spots against the snow-white beauty of her fur.
      • Bengt had always been very proud of her cat's spotted fur, which was shiny and brown with large red-copper rosettes outlined in dark-gray.
      • On a visit to a zoo in Delhi, India, in 1980, Mill spotted a feral, orange domestic cat with deep brown rosettes that lived in the rhinoceros compound and earned its keep as a ratter.
      • Thick stripes and spots covered his altered body, making it seem like a combination between the lines Jyfe had exhibited and the rosettes of a jaguar.
    3. 2.3 A radial arrangement of horizontally spreading leaves at the base of a low-growing plant.
      莲座(叶)丛;莲座状;丛生,簇生
      a large rosette of basal leaves
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Harvest most of the rosettes but let a few flowers form seeds; mache self-sows readily, so next year's crop is likely to seed itself.
      • They have low spreading rosettes of leaves numbering from six to twenty.
      • Young plants, with small leaves surrounding the central rosette, are best.
      • Dark green leaves arranged in rosettes cover the ground at a rapid rate, and stems clad in bright yellow bracts illuminate the spring garden.
      • Apply herbicides when plants are in the rosette stage and prior to bolting.
      • The plant is succulent with leaves in tight rosettes more or less four centimetres or more across in diameter.
      • Smooth leaves form a rosette at the base, which flower stems rise up to 12 inches above.
      • This jewel of a vegetable with its rosette of bluish-red leaves has great visual appeal - both in the kitchen and the garden.
      • You will probably see a rosette of fresh new leaves just waiting to emerge.
      • The key to good control of musk thistle with herbicides is to control young plants in early May while they're in the rosette stage.
      • These form rosettes of waxy evergreen leaves and star-shaped summer flowers.
      • In mild climates, the plant will maintain a low rosette of leaves and can be picked through the winter.
      • These plants are frequently monocarpic, their rosettes usually dying after flowering.
      • Their sturdy stems, topped with 4-to 5-inch-wide blooms, rise from rosettes of dark green, wavy-edged leaves.
      • If you want more of this beauty, you'll have to divide the rosettes in spring or take stem or root cuttings in summer, as it doesn't come true from seed.
      • Most are plants growing in a stemless rosette of leaves, sometimes referred to as a tank or cup.
      • Plants form a tight rosette of leaves, not a long blocky head.
      • Hyacinth bloom buds should have come up far enough to show in the heart of the leaf rosette before you bring the pots into the light.
      • Long, sturdy, round flower stems develop from the leaf rosette starting in May.
      • As soon as the second-year plants set seed and die, that seed germinates into pretty new rosettes that quickly monopolize light, moisture, nutrients, soil, and space.
    4. 2.4 A rose diamond.
      玫瑰花形琢型的钻石
      three large round rosettes put together using table cut diamonds set in silvered gold

Origin

Mid 18th century: from French, diminutive of rose (see rose).

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