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词汇 Lithuanian
释义

Definition of Lithuanian in English:

Lithuanian

adjective lɪθjʊˈeɪnɪənlɪθʊˈeɪnɪənˌlɪθəˈweɪniən
  • Relating to Lithuania or its people or language.

    (与)立陶宛(有关)的;(与)立陶宛人(有关)的;(与)立陶宛语(有关)的

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Frank Lubin, for example, became known as ‘the godfather of Lithuanian basketball’ after he led his ancestral country to the European championship in 1939.
    • The preservation of the Lithuanian language was a key concern among the initial wave of immigrants to the United States.
    • Fittingly, the country's print and electronic media embraced the action like never before, providing in-depth blanket coverage for the many Lithuanian fans who couldn't attend.
    • The Portugese band play the Lithuanian anthem instead of the Latvian one.
    • As the sergeant explained, all Lithuanian officers are required to learn at least one NATO language.
    • Ironically, the only unnaturalised Russians to be sent back were a community of Lithuanian miners who had settled in Scotland.
    • A child of Lithuanian Jews who emigrated to America in 1875, Berenson graduated from Harvard University in 1887.
    • Unlike Estonians and Latvians, Lithuanian tribes united and repulsed the German crusaders.
    • The Polish and Lithuanian leaders, assisted by a top European Union official, should try today to get both sides back to the negotiating table, and keep the protests peaceful.
    • Resources are hard-pressed, but Lithuanian authorities are working closely with British and other European police forces to gather intelligence to capture gangs.
    • In Mile End Hospital low paid men and women workers from African and Lithuanian backgrounds are united in the fight against low pay.
    • While walking to work they stumbled upon the Vilna Shul, an aging brick synagogue built by Lithuanian immigrants just after World War I.
    • This provided ample opportunity for a partisan war, one which would grow to near-mythic proportions for Lithuanians and the Lithuanian diaspora.
    • Now he has put up $100,000 for improvements to various open source software projects; and he's already paying a couple of Lithuanian programmers to build an open-source school management system.
    • The violence was directed against a small group of Lithuanian Jews.
    • Arrested twice in 1905, he joined the emigration of Lithuanian Jews to the United States.
    • After an uprising in 1863 the Lithuanian language was forbidden, but nationalist and strong Social Democrat movements developed from the 1880s.
    • As we motor through the European Union in future, we will be able to change our euros into Latvian lats and Lithuanian litas.
    • Similarly, the Economic Minister of Lithuania has been negotiating with a Russian oil company to exchange Lithuanian oil profits for Russian crude oil.
    • The Lithuanian language was formalized at the end of the nineteenth century.
noun lɪθjʊˈeɪnɪənlɪθʊˈeɪnɪənˌlɪθəˈweɪniən
  • 1A native or citizen of Lithuania, or a person of Lithuanian descent.

    立陶宛人

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The Russians and Lithuanians were quite active as well, firing one rider after the next off the front.
    • In the years since independence, Lithuanians, industrious and entrepreneurial, have made their country the most successful former Soviet republic.
    • In shops and restaurants the Lithuanians are polite and some younger staff try out their English.
    • When the Moroccans began to organize after a Spanish pogrom against them two years ago, the farmers began to bring in Ecuadoreans, Lithuanians and Ukrainians to replace them.
    • Nevski was also very successful in holding at bay the Germans and Tatars as well as the Lithuanians and Finns, all of who were aspiring to gain territory in Russia.
    • The last pagans in Europe, Lithuanians eventually accepted Catholicism as part of a strategic alliance with Poland in the fourteenth century.
    • However, over the three-year Nazi occupation, occupation authorities succeeded in recruiting or capturing tens of thousands of Lithuanians to work in Germany or serve in the military.
    • Historically, relations with other ethnic groups have been amicable; this is perhaps because over 80 percent of citizens are ethnic Lithuanians.
    • Like other Eastern European immigrants, Lithuanians were exploited for labor purposes.
    • Not reading Lithuanian, though, we didn't understand the sign that clearly stated that on the gates, and so were literally pushed out by the guards, the first grumpy Lithuanians we have come across.
    • Newly arrived Poles generally had their closest contacts outside Polish Americans with their former European neighbors: Czechs, Germans, and Lithuanians.
    • We have invited Africans, Lithuanians and Polish along and are hoping their ethnic floats will bring some life to the parade.
    • Deportation now awaits the six Latvians, two Lithuanians, four Russians, four Moldovans and two Ukrainians who were detained at Kendal and Penrith police stations after the raids.
    • The ancient Lithuanians worshiped many gods and believed that forests and fires were sacred.
    • The entire region was plundered in the following centuries by invading Poles, Lithuanians, Swedes, Germans, and most recently Russians.
    • Russians, Lithuanians, Croats, Serbs, and Poles each accounted for 3 percent to 4 percent of the workforce.
    • A lot of the eastern Europeans in Killarney, Lithuanians and so on, would have played a very good standard at home.
    • Nigerians, Russians and Lithuanians are also in the centre.
    • The Czechs, East Germans, Estonians, Lithuanians, Nicaraguans, Poles, and Russians who tried to dismantle their respective secret police systems had few guideposts and no precedents to follow.
    • Until the 1930 census, the U.S. government lumped Latvians in with Lithuanians and Russians.
  • 2mass noun The language of Lithuania, which belongs to the Baltic branch of the Indo-European family and has about 3.5 million speakers.

    立陶宛语

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The official language is Lithuanian, one of two remaining languages in the Baltic branch of the Indo-European languages.
    • The first book written in Lithuanian was published in 1547, and Vilnius University was founded in 1579.
    • Furthermore, each ethnic minority - Polish, Ukrainian, and Lithuanian - also speaks its own language.
    • Millions of people will continue to speak Italian, Greek, Latvian, Estonian, Lithuanian, Vietnamese, Lebanese and the world's many other languages when they die out in Australia.
    • The languages causing the headache for Brussels are Slovenian, Latvian and Lithuanian, all official languages in nations which joined the EU in May.
    • These languages include Chinese, Hindi / Urdu, Japanese, Juang, Korean, Icelandic, Lithuanian, and Russian.
    • Latvian, along with Lithuanian, is considered part of the small Baltic language group of the Indo-European family.
    • Before they could interview the people involved properly, the police had to find language experts who could translate between Estonian, Lithuanian and English.
    • He studied more than fifteen languages, including Hebrew, Hungarian, Arabic, and Lithuanian.
    • The inter-war period gave birth to a comprehensive system of education with Lithuanian as the language of instruction and the development of the press, literature, music, arts, and theater.
    • But strong words have the same effect in English, Lithuanian or any language.
    • Somewhat less famous was another lord, Paszkiewicz, or Poszka, who wrote poems in Lithuanian in praise of an oak tree which grew on his estate, to which he gave the name Baublis.
    • Remus speaks English and Lithuanian fluently, and didn't have to take up Irish because he was over the age of 10 when he joined Rockfield national school.
    • The bottle offered Russian, Lithuanian, Latvian and Estonian translations.
    • Fifteen minutes later, the machine comes back with a history of the Afghan hound in several languages, including Lithuanian.
    • He is a little Polish man who speaks Lithuanian and who works as a pants-finisher in the ghetto district.
    • He is the first member of his family to come to the United States from Lithuania, and speaks English, Lithuanian, Polish, and Russian.
    • Speakers of African language Lingala, Persian language Farsi, Lithuanian and Somali are among those needed.
    • For the odours in these ghastly charnel houses there may be words in Lithuanian, but there are none in English.
    • The official language of the country is Lithuanian, and the country's flag consists of three equal horizontal bands - yellow on the top, green in the middle, and red on the bottom.

Rhymes

Albanian, Azanian, Iranian, Jordanian, Mauritanian, Mediterranean, Panamanian, Pennsylvanian, Pomeranian, Romanian, Ruritanian, Sassanian, subterranean, Tasmanian, Transylvanian, Tripolitanian, Turanian, Ukrainian, Vulcanian

Definition of Lithuanian in US English:

Lithuanian

adjectiveˌliTHəˈwānēənˌlɪθəˈweɪniən
  • Relating to Lithuania or its people or language.

    (与)立陶宛(有关)的;(与)立陶宛人(有关)的;(与)立陶宛语(有关)的

    Example sentencesExamples
    • This provided ample opportunity for a partisan war, one which would grow to near-mythic proportions for Lithuanians and the Lithuanian diaspora.
    • A child of Lithuanian Jews who emigrated to America in 1875, Berenson graduated from Harvard University in 1887.
    • As we motor through the European Union in future, we will be able to change our euros into Latvian lats and Lithuanian litas.
    • In Mile End Hospital low paid men and women workers from African and Lithuanian backgrounds are united in the fight against low pay.
    • Ironically, the only unnaturalised Russians to be sent back were a community of Lithuanian miners who had settled in Scotland.
    • The preservation of the Lithuanian language was a key concern among the initial wave of immigrants to the United States.
    • The Lithuanian language was formalized at the end of the nineteenth century.
    • Unlike Estonians and Latvians, Lithuanian tribes united and repulsed the German crusaders.
    • Similarly, the Economic Minister of Lithuania has been negotiating with a Russian oil company to exchange Lithuanian oil profits for Russian crude oil.
    • The Portugese band play the Lithuanian anthem instead of the Latvian one.
    • The Polish and Lithuanian leaders, assisted by a top European Union official, should try today to get both sides back to the negotiating table, and keep the protests peaceful.
    • The violence was directed against a small group of Lithuanian Jews.
    • Now he has put up $100,000 for improvements to various open source software projects; and he's already paying a couple of Lithuanian programmers to build an open-source school management system.
    • Resources are hard-pressed, but Lithuanian authorities are working closely with British and other European police forces to gather intelligence to capture gangs.
    • After an uprising in 1863 the Lithuanian language was forbidden, but nationalist and strong Social Democrat movements developed from the 1880s.
    • As the sergeant explained, all Lithuanian officers are required to learn at least one NATO language.
    • Arrested twice in 1905, he joined the emigration of Lithuanian Jews to the United States.
    • While walking to work they stumbled upon the Vilna Shul, an aging brick synagogue built by Lithuanian immigrants just after World War I.
    • Frank Lubin, for example, became known as ‘the godfather of Lithuanian basketball’ after he led his ancestral country to the European championship in 1939.
    • Fittingly, the country's print and electronic media embraced the action like never before, providing in-depth blanket coverage for the many Lithuanian fans who couldn't attend.
nounˌliTHəˈwānēənˌlɪθəˈweɪniən
  • 1A native or citizen of Lithuania, or a person of Lithuanian descent.

    立陶宛人

    Example sentencesExamples
    • In the years since independence, Lithuanians, industrious and entrepreneurial, have made their country the most successful former Soviet republic.
    • In shops and restaurants the Lithuanians are polite and some younger staff try out their English.
    • The ancient Lithuanians worshiped many gods and believed that forests and fires were sacred.
    • The last pagans in Europe, Lithuanians eventually accepted Catholicism as part of a strategic alliance with Poland in the fourteenth century.
    • The Czechs, East Germans, Estonians, Lithuanians, Nicaraguans, Poles, and Russians who tried to dismantle their respective secret police systems had few guideposts and no precedents to follow.
    • Nigerians, Russians and Lithuanians are also in the centre.
    • Historically, relations with other ethnic groups have been amicable; this is perhaps because over 80 percent of citizens are ethnic Lithuanians.
    • The Russians and Lithuanians were quite active as well, firing one rider after the next off the front.
    • Deportation now awaits the six Latvians, two Lithuanians, four Russians, four Moldovans and two Ukrainians who were detained at Kendal and Penrith police stations after the raids.
    • Newly arrived Poles generally had their closest contacts outside Polish Americans with their former European neighbors: Czechs, Germans, and Lithuanians.
    • Until the 1930 census, the U.S. government lumped Latvians in with Lithuanians and Russians.
    • A lot of the eastern Europeans in Killarney, Lithuanians and so on, would have played a very good standard at home.
    • Nevski was also very successful in holding at bay the Germans and Tatars as well as the Lithuanians and Finns, all of who were aspiring to gain territory in Russia.
    • However, over the three-year Nazi occupation, occupation authorities succeeded in recruiting or capturing tens of thousands of Lithuanians to work in Germany or serve in the military.
    • We have invited Africans, Lithuanians and Polish along and are hoping their ethnic floats will bring some life to the parade.
    • Russians, Lithuanians, Croats, Serbs, and Poles each accounted for 3 percent to 4 percent of the workforce.
    • When the Moroccans began to organize after a Spanish pogrom against them two years ago, the farmers began to bring in Ecuadoreans, Lithuanians and Ukrainians to replace them.
    • Not reading Lithuanian, though, we didn't understand the sign that clearly stated that on the gates, and so were literally pushed out by the guards, the first grumpy Lithuanians we have come across.
    • Like other Eastern European immigrants, Lithuanians were exploited for labor purposes.
    • The entire region was plundered in the following centuries by invading Poles, Lithuanians, Swedes, Germans, and most recently Russians.
  • 2The Baltic language of Lithuania.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Fifteen minutes later, the machine comes back with a history of the Afghan hound in several languages, including Lithuanian.
    • Remus speaks English and Lithuanian fluently, and didn't have to take up Irish because he was over the age of 10 when he joined Rockfield national school.
    • Before they could interview the people involved properly, the police had to find language experts who could translate between Estonian, Lithuanian and English.
    • The inter-war period gave birth to a comprehensive system of education with Lithuanian as the language of instruction and the development of the press, literature, music, arts, and theater.
    • The official language of the country is Lithuanian, and the country's flag consists of three equal horizontal bands - yellow on the top, green in the middle, and red on the bottom.
    • The official language is Lithuanian, one of two remaining languages in the Baltic branch of the Indo-European languages.
    • For the odours in these ghastly charnel houses there may be words in Lithuanian, but there are none in English.
    • The first book written in Lithuanian was published in 1547, and Vilnius University was founded in 1579.
    • He studied more than fifteen languages, including Hebrew, Hungarian, Arabic, and Lithuanian.
    • But strong words have the same effect in English, Lithuanian or any language.
    • The languages causing the headache for Brussels are Slovenian, Latvian and Lithuanian, all official languages in nations which joined the EU in May.
    • Speakers of African language Lingala, Persian language Farsi, Lithuanian and Somali are among those needed.
    • Furthermore, each ethnic minority - Polish, Ukrainian, and Lithuanian - also speaks its own language.
    • Millions of people will continue to speak Italian, Greek, Latvian, Estonian, Lithuanian, Vietnamese, Lebanese and the world's many other languages when they die out in Australia.
    • Somewhat less famous was another lord, Paszkiewicz, or Poszka, who wrote poems in Lithuanian in praise of an oak tree which grew on his estate, to which he gave the name Baublis.
    • He is a little Polish man who speaks Lithuanian and who works as a pants-finisher in the ghetto district.
    • These languages include Chinese, Hindi / Urdu, Japanese, Juang, Korean, Icelandic, Lithuanian, and Russian.
    • Latvian, along with Lithuanian, is considered part of the small Baltic language group of the Indo-European family.
    • The bottle offered Russian, Lithuanian, Latvian and Estonian translations.
    • He is the first member of his family to come to the United States from Lithuania, and speaks English, Lithuanian, Polish, and Russian.
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