释义 |
Definition of Grecian in English: Grecianadjective ˈɡriːʃ(ə)nˈɡriʃən Relating to ancient Greece, especially its architecture. (与)古希腊(有关)的,(尤指建筑)希腊式的 Example sentencesExamples - The main map is painted with a palette believed to be common to that found on Grecian urns and is configured very similar to Mare Nostrum.
- It was ancient Grecian symbols again, and after spending an hour trying to ‘decode’ that door, she actually understood some of it.
- In Grecian times bracelets were popular with men and soldiers wore defensive bands of leather, often decorated with gold, silver and or gemstones, on their forearms.
- Another said, ‘It is far from a good design - the elevation shows columns, architraves, a pediment as though it were a stone building in the Grecian style - instead being but wood.’
- Leaping copper flames, which have been gilded to reflect the sun's light with a fiery glow, crown the impressive structure, resting on a ten-foot Grecian tripod at the top of the column.
- Eros, the ancient Greek god of love, also emerged from the water and floated above a parade of human figures that brought to life the images found on centuries-old Grecian frescoes, mosaics and paintings.
- A trip to Turkey is a romantic experience in which one finds the past everywhere to be savoured: awe-inspiring mosques, Grecian amphitheatres, statues, and a subterranean city.
- Secondly, since the terms ‘gay’ and ‘homosexual’ did not actually exist in ancient Grecian society, it is therefore impossible to label Alexander's sexuality under such terms.
- The urn rests on a 10 ft Grecian tripod, on top of the Grade One listed column, which is one of the first things the 200,000 visitors a year see as they approach the North Yorkshire stately home.
- During 800 BC Alexander the Great conquered the Grecian Empire of city-states and Greece became part of the Macedonian Empire.
- All of the great Grecian playwrights - Sophocles, Euripedes, Aristophenes - dealt with the women's issue.
- Besides, there are hairpins in delicate gold, silver, and bronze with motifs of peacock, swan and deer, inspired by Grecian designs.
- Caesarian births have been a part of human culture since ancient times, and numerous references appear in ancient Hindu, Egyptian, Grecian and Roman mythologies.
- In the fourth century BC, temples of healing, venerating the god Asclepias were erected all over the Grecian world from Epidaurus to Tricca, from Pergamon to Corinth.
- Isadora Duncan shocked audiences at the turn of the 20th century by baring her body in dances as free-flowing as her tunics - attire and movement both inspired by the prancing figures on ancient Grecian vases.
- Of course, there is nothing new about associating art with immortality: Shakespeare's sonnets do so repeatedly, Donne imagines a poem as a funeral urn, and Keats sees a Grecian urn as an image of art's everlastingness.
Synonyms ancient greek, hellenic, attic
OriginLate Middle English: from Old French grecien, from Latin Graecia 'Greece'. Rhymesaccretion, Capetian, completion, concretion, deletion, depletion, Diocletian, excretion, Helvetian, repletion, Rhodesian, secretion, suppletion, Tahitian, venetian Definition of Grecian in US English: GrecianadjectiveˈɡrēSHənˈɡriʃən Relating to ancient Greece, especially its architecture. (与)古希腊(有关)的,(尤指建筑)希腊式的 Example sentencesExamples - In the fourth century BC, temples of healing, venerating the god Asclepias were erected all over the Grecian world from Epidaurus to Tricca, from Pergamon to Corinth.
- Of course, there is nothing new about associating art with immortality: Shakespeare's sonnets do so repeatedly, Donne imagines a poem as a funeral urn, and Keats sees a Grecian urn as an image of art's everlastingness.
- It was ancient Grecian symbols again, and after spending an hour trying to ‘decode’ that door, she actually understood some of it.
- During 800 BC Alexander the Great conquered the Grecian Empire of city-states and Greece became part of the Macedonian Empire.
- Another said, ‘It is far from a good design - the elevation shows columns, architraves, a pediment as though it were a stone building in the Grecian style - instead being but wood.’
- Eros, the ancient Greek god of love, also emerged from the water and floated above a parade of human figures that brought to life the images found on centuries-old Grecian frescoes, mosaics and paintings.
- In Grecian times bracelets were popular with men and soldiers wore defensive bands of leather, often decorated with gold, silver and or gemstones, on their forearms.
- Caesarian births have been a part of human culture since ancient times, and numerous references appear in ancient Hindu, Egyptian, Grecian and Roman mythologies.
- Leaping copper flames, which have been gilded to reflect the sun's light with a fiery glow, crown the impressive structure, resting on a ten-foot Grecian tripod at the top of the column.
- The main map is painted with a palette believed to be common to that found on Grecian urns and is configured very similar to Mare Nostrum.
- Besides, there are hairpins in delicate gold, silver, and bronze with motifs of peacock, swan and deer, inspired by Grecian designs.
- The urn rests on a 10 ft Grecian tripod, on top of the Grade One listed column, which is one of the first things the 200,000 visitors a year see as they approach the North Yorkshire stately home.
- A trip to Turkey is a romantic experience in which one finds the past everywhere to be savoured: awe-inspiring mosques, Grecian amphitheatres, statues, and a subterranean city.
- Secondly, since the terms ‘gay’ and ‘homosexual’ did not actually exist in ancient Grecian society, it is therefore impossible to label Alexander's sexuality under such terms.
- All of the great Grecian playwrights - Sophocles, Euripedes, Aristophenes - dealt with the women's issue.
- Isadora Duncan shocked audiences at the turn of the 20th century by baring her body in dances as free-flowing as her tunics - attire and movement both inspired by the prancing figures on ancient Grecian vases.
Synonyms ancient greek, hellenic, attic
OriginLate Middle English: from Old French grecien, from Latin Graecia ‘Greece’. |