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词汇 barrio
释义

Definition of barrio in English:

barrio

nounPlural barrios ˈbarɪəʊˈbɑriˌoʊ
  • 1A district of a town in Spain and Spanish-speaking countries.

    (西班牙和西班牙语国家城镇的)区;分区

    Example sentencesExamples
    • We go to a new barrio still being built on the rural fringes of La Matanza.
    • TV piquetera has been developing since 2001 in working class barrios on the outskirts of Buenos Aires, Argentina.
    • They had even reserved a storeroom in the maquiladora workers' barrio of Maclovio Rojas to house the confiscated machines.
    • But everyone in Pablo's barrio seems to have benefited from those who have contact with foreigners.
    • From the guarded and secretive streets of the whitewashed barrios, with their flower-strewn interiors, to the shady bodegas where ice cold sherry is served from ancient wooden casks, everything about Seville says romance.
    • It's in this quiet barrio, or neighborhood, beside a river and between two ridges, that Mark and Peg Schar have settled into farm life with a cafetal (coffee plantation) and sugar cane fields.
    • In 1995 police stopped Antonio Ruiz in his barrio in the eastern coastal Spanish city of Valencia.
    • The poor barrios of Santo Domingo, however, continue to grow - in part due to migration from impoverished rural areas.
    • This project continued for seven years in two barrios in the District of Aguablanca in Cali.
    • I have spent the past three weeks filming in the hillside barrios of Caracas, in streets and breeze-block houses that defy gravity and torrential rain and emerge at night like fireflies in the fog.
    • ‘It's the first time that the government has ever done anything with our oil wealth to benefit the poor,’ says Carrillo, sitting in an improvised classroom in a poor barrio in Caracas.
    • A small alien was sighted near a Roman Catholic high school in the barrio Caspana of Calama, a small city in Chile north of Antofagasta.
    • It is wealth from these sales that has enabled Mr Chavez to invest heavily in social programmes and in establishing schools and clinics in the poorer barrios.
    • Southwest of Guatemala City, a road leads to the barrio of La Esperanza.
    • Some of these fights, like that in the Tijuana barrio of Maclovio Rojas, go back ten years, and have also been marked by the imprisonment of community leaders.
    • Utrera, 20 miles east of Seville, is an industrial place and the Reyeses lived in Arenal, one of the town's poorer barrios, in a bare house with a leaky roof.
    • I was delighted to find that Senyor Adria has a rival in a restaurant just 100 yards from my humble residence in the Poblenou barrio of Borecelona.
    • You can still buy fresh pan dulce (sweet bread) every morning in the barrios and see family and friends as they gather on the front porch to talk in the evenings.
    • As an entre to this most theatrical of dances, head for the Sunday morning antiques market in the bohemian barrio of San Telmo, where dancers perform in front of Cafe Dorrego on Plaza Dorrego.
    • The companies over-complied and by 2001 there were 1,300 phone booths in Caracas alone, with an average of 8 phones each, located in the most populated barrios.
    Synonyms
    outlying districts, edges, fringes, suburbs, suburbia
    1. 1.1 (in the US) the Spanish-speaking quarter of a town or city, especially one with a high poverty level.
      (美国)(城镇中)说西班牙语居民的集居区
      Example sentencesExamples
      • In this collection of short stories, Rodriguez brings us into the lives of a wide range of characters from Los Angeles' Latino barrio.
      • According to David, Taggett stole a high-profile project from him in one of Tucson's historic barrios.
      • Among New York City puertorriquenos, the Latino-populated area was referred to as el barrio, or ‘the neighborhood.’

Origin

Spanish, perhaps from Arabic.

Rhymes

Mario

Definition of barrio in US English:

barrio

nounˈbɑriˌoʊˈbärēˌō
  • 1A district of a town in Spain and Spanish-speaking countries.

    (西班牙和西班牙语国家城镇的)区;分区

    Example sentencesExamples
    • We go to a new barrio still being built on the rural fringes of La Matanza.
    • In 1995 police stopped Antonio Ruiz in his barrio in the eastern coastal Spanish city of Valencia.
    • The companies over-complied and by 2001 there were 1,300 phone booths in Caracas alone, with an average of 8 phones each, located in the most populated barrios.
    • ‘It's the first time that the government has ever done anything with our oil wealth to benefit the poor,’ says Carrillo, sitting in an improvised classroom in a poor barrio in Caracas.
    • They had even reserved a storeroom in the maquiladora workers' barrio of Maclovio Rojas to house the confiscated machines.
    • From the guarded and secretive streets of the whitewashed barrios, with their flower-strewn interiors, to the shady bodegas where ice cold sherry is served from ancient wooden casks, everything about Seville says romance.
    • Utrera, 20 miles east of Seville, is an industrial place and the Reyeses lived in Arenal, one of the town's poorer barrios, in a bare house with a leaky roof.
    • I have spent the past three weeks filming in the hillside barrios of Caracas, in streets and breeze-block houses that defy gravity and torrential rain and emerge at night like fireflies in the fog.
    • TV piquetera has been developing since 2001 in working class barrios on the outskirts of Buenos Aires, Argentina.
    • As an entre to this most theatrical of dances, head for the Sunday morning antiques market in the bohemian barrio of San Telmo, where dancers perform in front of Cafe Dorrego on Plaza Dorrego.
    • It is wealth from these sales that has enabled Mr Chavez to invest heavily in social programmes and in establishing schools and clinics in the poorer barrios.
    • This project continued for seven years in two barrios in the District of Aguablanca in Cali.
    • But everyone in Pablo's barrio seems to have benefited from those who have contact with foreigners.
    • Southwest of Guatemala City, a road leads to the barrio of La Esperanza.
    • Some of these fights, like that in the Tijuana barrio of Maclovio Rojas, go back ten years, and have also been marked by the imprisonment of community leaders.
    • You can still buy fresh pan dulce (sweet bread) every morning in the barrios and see family and friends as they gather on the front porch to talk in the evenings.
    • I was delighted to find that Senyor Adria has a rival in a restaurant just 100 yards from my humble residence in the Poblenou barrio of Borecelona.
    • The poor barrios of Santo Domingo, however, continue to grow - in part due to migration from impoverished rural areas.
    • A small alien was sighted near a Roman Catholic high school in the barrio Caspana of Calama, a small city in Chile north of Antofagasta.
    • It's in this quiet barrio, or neighborhood, beside a river and between two ridges, that Mark and Peg Schar have settled into farm life with a cafetal (coffee plantation) and sugar cane fields.
    Synonyms
    outlying districts, edges, fringes, suburbs, suburbia
    1. 1.1 (in the US) the Spanish-speaking quarter of a town or city, especially one with a high poverty level.
      (美国)(城镇中)说西班牙语居民的集居区
      Example sentencesExamples
      • According to David, Taggett stole a high-profile project from him in one of Tucson's historic barrios.
      • In this collection of short stories, Rodriguez brings us into the lives of a wide range of characters from Los Angeles' Latino barrio.
      • Among New York City puertorriquenos, the Latino-populated area was referred to as el barrio, or ‘the neighborhood.’

Origin

Spanish, perhaps from Arabic.

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