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词汇 ode
释义

Definition of ode in English:

ode

noun əʊdoʊd
  • 1A lyric poem, typically one in the form of an address to a particular subject, written in varied or irregular metre.

    颂,抒情诗

    Example sentencesExamples
    • If I could write good poetry I would write an ode to you all.
    • In his writing, he can sing an ode to BBQ and Spaghetti Carbonara the way that some folks can write about Michelin Stars.
    • Yet even to this day well-heeled members of the arts establishment recite odes to the old rogue.
    • Kipling penned this ode to imperialism as a tribute to the US annexation of the Philippines.
    • As true sycophants, we sing odes eulogizing rulers, while creative literary minds, great artists are simply ignored.
    • Then take turns reciting your odes to love.
    • Now it's Jack Robertson's turn, a beautifully written ode to being Green.
    • Gone are the lamentable characters of Marcus' tales, replaced by a straightforward ode to maternal love.
    • Catherine hummed and sang a hymn that faded quickly from a cheery ode to a mournful dirge.
    • Nowhere in the play do readership issues come to the fore more strikingly than in the five choral odes.
    • Born in Watford, Herts, Fletcher started writing odes as a pupil at Friern Barnet Grammar, where he produced concerts.
    • Like many of her songs, it's an ode to life's simple pleasures.
    • Every song on this record is an ode to some long-distance lost love.
    • All these odes to forgotten love, booze and death are sung in the key of extreme melancholy and ring with a heaping amount of honesty.
    • And much the same could be said of the conclusion to the second choral ode.
    • Here are the original words of the song, which is an ode to drinking.
    • Dave, bless his warped soul, writes an ode to Neil Diamond that must be read to be believed.
    • This moving ode is due to be sung tonight at the Frog Hall's final weekend blow out - it's a wake, they insist, not a funeral.
    • Secondly, Tarn is a master of the experimental romantic ode.
    Synonyms
    poem, piece of poetry, lyric, sonnet, limerick, rhyme, composition, metrical composition, piece of doggerel
    1. 1.1 A classical poem of a kind originally meant to be sung.
      颂诗,赋
      Example sentencesExamples
      • In Greek drama and in the works of Pindar, odes were sung by a chorus and performed with dance.
      • Sports books are hardly a new phenomenon - the poet Pindar was writing odes to naked Greek athletes 25 centuries ago.
      • Another Milton scholar present announced that while rhyme was no ornament to verse, the return of odes and sonnets was inevitable.

Origin

Late 16th century: from French, from late Latin oda, from Greek ōidē, Attic form of aoidē 'song', from aeidein 'sing'.

Rhymes

abode, bestrode, bode, code, commode, corrode, download, encode, erode, explode, forebode, goad, implode, load, lode, middle-of-the-road, mode, node, offload, outrode, road, rode, sarod, Spode, strode, toad, upload, woad

Definition of ode in US English:

ode

nounōdoʊd
  • 1A lyric poem in the form of an address to a particular subject, often elevated in style or manner and written in varied or irregular meter.

    颂,抒情诗

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Gone are the lamentable characters of Marcus' tales, replaced by a straightforward ode to maternal love.
    • Catherine hummed and sang a hymn that faded quickly from a cheery ode to a mournful dirge.
    • This moving ode is due to be sung tonight at the Frog Hall's final weekend blow out - it's a wake, they insist, not a funeral.
    • Here are the original words of the song, which is an ode to drinking.
    • Kipling penned this ode to imperialism as a tribute to the US annexation of the Philippines.
    • Every song on this record is an ode to some long-distance lost love.
    • If I could write good poetry I would write an ode to you all.
    • And much the same could be said of the conclusion to the second choral ode.
    • Then take turns reciting your odes to love.
    • Dave, bless his warped soul, writes an ode to Neil Diamond that must be read to be believed.
    • Like many of her songs, it's an ode to life's simple pleasures.
    • Secondly, Tarn is a master of the experimental romantic ode.
    • Born in Watford, Herts, Fletcher started writing odes as a pupil at Friern Barnet Grammar, where he produced concerts.
    • Yet even to this day well-heeled members of the arts establishment recite odes to the old rogue.
    • All these odes to forgotten love, booze and death are sung in the key of extreme melancholy and ring with a heaping amount of honesty.
    • As true sycophants, we sing odes eulogizing rulers, while creative literary minds, great artists are simply ignored.
    • In his writing, he can sing an ode to BBQ and Spaghetti Carbonara the way that some folks can write about Michelin Stars.
    • Nowhere in the play do readership issues come to the fore more strikingly than in the five choral odes.
    • Now it's Jack Robertson's turn, a beautifully written ode to being Green.
    Synonyms
    poem, piece of poetry, lyric, sonnet, limerick, rhyme, composition, metrical composition, piece of doggerel
    1. 1.1 A poem meant to be sung.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Another Milton scholar present announced that while rhyme was no ornament to verse, the return of odes and sonnets was inevitable.
      • Sports books are hardly a new phenomenon - the poet Pindar was writing odes to naked Greek athletes 25 centuries ago.
      • In Greek drama and in the works of Pindar, odes were sung by a chorus and performed with dance.

Origin

Late 16th century: from French, from late Latin oda, from Greek ōidē, Attic form of aoidē ‘song’, from aeidein ‘sing’.

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