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词汇 youth
释义

Definition of youth in English:

youth

nounPlural youths juːθjuːθ
  • 1in singular The period between childhood and adult age.

    青(少)年时代,青春时期

    he had been a keen sportsman in his youth

    他在青少年时代是个积极的运动员。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The focus of this project is youth leading youth, rather than youth being directed by adults.
    • Considering the youth of that second group, we'll call its members the Eager Eight.
    • He describes Patton's childhood, youth, and middle age fairly well.
    • We have not heard of any of the youth or the young adults who may be involved.
    • The family oriented residential event offered a full programme of presentations, seminars and workshops for the youth and adults.
    • As I approach middle age I find maturity is best summed up as 40 is the old age of youth and 50 is the youth of old age.
    • There was no statistical difference between the youth and adult groups in the distribution of diagnoses of injuries.
    • Down the hall, the youth committee is struggling to find adults to chaperone the youth service project.
    • You aren't yet of age but a strong youth may turn into a stronger adult!
    • Minority youth are the most enthusiastic and prolific readers of all.
    • The comment from the youth that their age group is not catered for is correct.
    • A second youth Andrew Hilton has also been given an ASBO and banned from the village in the evenings.
    • Stories are told about different aspects of the life of the Prophet, his birth, childhood, youth and adult life.
    • What changed, he said, wasn't so much the behavior of the police, but the expectations of the poor, especially the minority youth.
    • A treasure hunt has been organised by the youth club for the youth of the area.
    • It was hoped, Witbooi added, that this would sensitise the youth on what was wrong and right in society.
    • In terms of the severity, there was no difference between the youth and adult groups.
    • The youth bust and old age boom will change the states' dependency ratios.
    • There was a period when the youth were seen avoiding temples or any religious activities.
    • The youth were overwhelmingly from secondary schools, with an average age of 14 to 17.
    Synonyms
    early years, early life, young days, teens, teenage years, adolescence, young adulthood, boyhood, girlhood, childhood
    immaturity
    prime, heyday, day, hour, time, springtime, salad days, bloom, peak, pinnacle, height
    Law minority
    rare juvenility, juvenescence
    1. 1.1mass noun The qualities of vigour, freshness, or immaturity as associated with being young.
      she imagined her youth and beauty fading

      她想像自己的青春和美貌逐渐消逝。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • The qualities of youth and beauty were regarded as a fitting gift for their gods.
      • You have an endearing quality of youth and innocence that attracts people around you today.
      • This country has to stay young, and will draw its youth and vigour from the new faces that are bound to come to power.
      • These are days of freshness, of youth and of fresh talent.
      Synonyms
      youthfulness, youngness, freshness, bloom
    2. 1.2in singular An early stage in the development of something.
      早期,初期
      this publishing sector is no longer in its youth

      这个出版部门已不再处于初创期。

  • 2A young man.

    男青年,小伙子

    he was attacked by a gang of youths

    他遭到一伙男青年的袭击。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • One youth aged 17, had been released from a four-month custody sentence for a racist attack on a Turkish worker at his Acomb shop only days before the incident.
    • He relives his childhood as a lonely youth whose only human contact seems to be his parents.
    • A second youth was struck in the head, reportedly with a chair.
    • The claim was proved to be fraudulent and the youth received 200 hours of community service.
    • Children and youths are our responsibility and it is us who are letting down our youngsters.
    • The second youth was white, aged 13 to 14, about 4 foot four inches tall, dressed in a similar fashion with a dark blue or black woolly hat.
    • A father of two was beaten to death as he confronted a gang of youths outside his parents' home.
    • On the day of the attack, a gang of youths had marched into the school's foyer at lunchtime.
    • The second youth has yet to learn of his punishment.
    • The youth, filmed over a two-and-a-half hour period, wore a white handkerchief across the lower part of his face in an attempt to hide his identity from police cameras.
    • A pupil at Wright Robinson Sports College is recovering from a knife attack by a youth as he left school.
    • The set-up of the court is different from that for adults so the youth on trial feels more a part of the process.
    • There were a gang of hard looking youths hanging around near the spot where the car should be parked.
    • The second youth, probably seeking to rescue the first, was probably overcome by fumes as well.
    • Police have taken action to stop large gangs of youths congregating on church grounds.
    • The behaviour of gangs of youths has been making life a nightmare for some residents.
    • But as a callow youth and a shallow adult, I turned to the Flat and frankly didn't much care for the jumps.
    • Gangs of youths are making life hell for residents and traders in Rodbourne Cheney.
    • Nuisance caused by gangs of noisy youths congregating in the alleys has also stopped.
    • In an attack last weekend, an information board was targeted by a gang of youths.
    Synonyms
    young man, boy, lad, youngster, juvenile, teenager, adolescent, junior, minor, young one
    stripling, whippersnapper, fledgling
    Scottish &amp Northern English bairn
    informal kid, chav, hoodie, teen, shaver
    1. 2.1treated as singular or plural Young people considered as a group.
      总称青年们
      as modifier youth culture
      middle-class youth have romanticized poverty
      Example sentencesExamples
      • To understand Northtown in the '80s is to understand Minnesota suburban youth culture in those days.
      • The book was timely, arriving at a time when youth culture was just kicking off in Britain, and linked nicely with the existentialist thought slowly filtering in from France.
      • An affinity with Britain's emerging youth culture is already apparent in his debut feature It's Trad, Dad!
      • I am one of the great army of black youth of this country who feels with the intuitive instinct of the oppressed, that a crisis is imminent.
      • Sister Bliss's big beats aren't really the soundtrack to youth culture anymore though, rather a nostalgic reminder of pills, parties and puberty.
      • Raves and free parties first emerged on the UK dance scene in the late 1980s and dominated youth culture until the mid-1990s.
      • Shock, them, disturb them, draw their attention away from the popular culture of youth and joy.
      • Complicating the issue of national identity was the rise of a distinct and separate youth culture.
      • The televised trial has drawn national attention in a country where youth sports are popular and competitive.
      • The double standard that black youth feel operating in their communities is undermining their faith in black leaders to walk their talk.
      • There are at least two key aspects of youth culture in 1980s Britain which, I feel, will never be ‘revived’.
      • Britpop was Trainspotting's main vehicle to integrate youth subculture into popular culture.
      • It's a daring look at contemporary youth culture, exploring issues like identity, religion, sexual awakening and power.
      • From the very beginning this new youth culture crossed national borders.
      • In sensuality or in violence, youth cultures in many African societies express their outrage and subvert the social norms.
      • She shows how Hispanic minors are poised to overtake African Americans as the largest ethnic youth population in the country.
      • At the minute we're the mainstay of youth culture.
      • I guess I worry about talking about youth culture generally, because I think it's such a small slice of youth culture.
      • For urban teenagers, American youth culture, especially clothing and music, is very popular.
      • Music halls, theaters, book shops, and art galleries attract crowds of middle-class youth.
      Synonyms
      young people, young, younger generation, rising generation, next generation
      informal kids

Origin

Old English geoguth, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch jeugd, German Jugend, also to young.

Rhymes

buck tooth, couth, Duluth, forsooth, Maynooth, ruth, sleuth, sooth, strewth, tooth, truth

Definition of youth in US English:

youth

nounjuːθ
  • 1in singular The period between childhood and adult age.

    青(少)年时代,青春时期

    he had been a keen sportsman in his youth

    他在青少年时代是个积极的运动员。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • There was a period when the youth were seen avoiding temples or any religious activities.
    • The family oriented residential event offered a full programme of presentations, seminars and workshops for the youth and adults.
    • There was no statistical difference between the youth and adult groups in the distribution of diagnoses of injuries.
    • He describes Patton's childhood, youth, and middle age fairly well.
    • A second youth Andrew Hilton has also been given an ASBO and banned from the village in the evenings.
    • You aren't yet of age but a strong youth may turn into a stronger adult!
    • The focus of this project is youth leading youth, rather than youth being directed by adults.
    • As I approach middle age I find maturity is best summed up as 40 is the old age of youth and 50 is the youth of old age.
    • It was hoped, Witbooi added, that this would sensitise the youth on what was wrong and right in society.
    • We have not heard of any of the youth or the young adults who may be involved.
    • Stories are told about different aspects of the life of the Prophet, his birth, childhood, youth and adult life.
    • The comment from the youth that their age group is not catered for is correct.
    • In terms of the severity, there was no difference between the youth and adult groups.
    • The youth were overwhelmingly from secondary schools, with an average age of 14 to 17.
    • What changed, he said, wasn't so much the behavior of the police, but the expectations of the poor, especially the minority youth.
    • A treasure hunt has been organised by the youth club for the youth of the area.
    • Down the hall, the youth committee is struggling to find adults to chaperone the youth service project.
    • The youth bust and old age boom will change the states' dependency ratios.
    • Minority youth are the most enthusiastic and prolific readers of all.
    • Considering the youth of that second group, we'll call its members the Eager Eight.
    Synonyms
    early years, early life, young days, teens, teenage years, adolescence, young adulthood, boyhood, girlhood, childhood
    1. 1.1mass noun The qualities of vigour, freshness, or immaturity as associated with being young.
      she imagined her youth and beauty fading

      她想像自己的青春和美貌逐渐消逝。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • These are days of freshness, of youth and of fresh talent.
      • You have an endearing quality of youth and innocence that attracts people around you today.
      • This country has to stay young, and will draw its youth and vigour from the new faces that are bound to come to power.
      • The qualities of youth and beauty were regarded as a fitting gift for their gods.
      Synonyms
      youthfulness, youngness, freshness, bloom
    2. 1.2in singular An early stage in the development of something.
      早期,初期
      this publishing sector is no longer in its youth

      这个出版部门已不再处于初创期。

  • 2A young man.

    男青年,小伙子

    he was attacked by a gang of youths

    他遭到一伙男青年的袭击。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Nuisance caused by gangs of noisy youths congregating in the alleys has also stopped.
    • In an attack last weekend, an information board was targeted by a gang of youths.
    • A pupil at Wright Robinson Sports College is recovering from a knife attack by a youth as he left school.
    • On the day of the attack, a gang of youths had marched into the school's foyer at lunchtime.
    • The claim was proved to be fraudulent and the youth received 200 hours of community service.
    • The second youth, probably seeking to rescue the first, was probably overcome by fumes as well.
    • The second youth was white, aged 13 to 14, about 4 foot four inches tall, dressed in a similar fashion with a dark blue or black woolly hat.
    • Gangs of youths are making life hell for residents and traders in Rodbourne Cheney.
    • There were a gang of hard looking youths hanging around near the spot where the car should be parked.
    • One youth aged 17, had been released from a four-month custody sentence for a racist attack on a Turkish worker at his Acomb shop only days before the incident.
    • The second youth has yet to learn of his punishment.
    • A second youth was struck in the head, reportedly with a chair.
    • Children and youths are our responsibility and it is us who are letting down our youngsters.
    • Police have taken action to stop large gangs of youths congregating on church grounds.
    • The youth, filmed over a two-and-a-half hour period, wore a white handkerchief across the lower part of his face in an attempt to hide his identity from police cameras.
    • He relives his childhood as a lonely youth whose only human contact seems to be his parents.
    • But as a callow youth and a shallow adult, I turned to the Flat and frankly didn't much care for the jumps.
    • The behaviour of gangs of youths has been making life a nightmare for some residents.
    • A father of two was beaten to death as he confronted a gang of youths outside his parents' home.
    • The set-up of the court is different from that for adults so the youth on trial feels more a part of the process.
    Synonyms
    young man, boy, lad, youngster, juvenile, teenager, adolescent, junior, minor, young one
    1. 2.1treated as singular or plural Young people considered as a group.
      总称青年们
      as modifier youth culture
      middle-class youth have romanticized poverty
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Raves and free parties first emerged on the UK dance scene in the late 1980s and dominated youth culture until the mid-1990s.
      • The book was timely, arriving at a time when youth culture was just kicking off in Britain, and linked nicely with the existentialist thought slowly filtering in from France.
      • In sensuality or in violence, youth cultures in many African societies express their outrage and subvert the social norms.
      • Sister Bliss's big beats aren't really the soundtrack to youth culture anymore though, rather a nostalgic reminder of pills, parties and puberty.
      • Complicating the issue of national identity was the rise of a distinct and separate youth culture.
      • Music halls, theaters, book shops, and art galleries attract crowds of middle-class youth.
      • To understand Northtown in the '80s is to understand Minnesota suburban youth culture in those days.
      • It's a daring look at contemporary youth culture, exploring issues like identity, religion, sexual awakening and power.
      • She shows how Hispanic minors are poised to overtake African Americans as the largest ethnic youth population in the country.
      • The televised trial has drawn national attention in a country where youth sports are popular and competitive.
      • For urban teenagers, American youth culture, especially clothing and music, is very popular.
      • An affinity with Britain's emerging youth culture is already apparent in his debut feature It's Trad, Dad!
      • Britpop was Trainspotting's main vehicle to integrate youth subculture into popular culture.
      • From the very beginning this new youth culture crossed national borders.
      • Shock, them, disturb them, draw their attention away from the popular culture of youth and joy.
      • There are at least two key aspects of youth culture in 1980s Britain which, I feel, will never be ‘revived’.
      • I guess I worry about talking about youth culture generally, because I think it's such a small slice of youth culture.
      • At the minute we're the mainstay of youth culture.
      Synonyms
      young people, young, younger generation, rising generation, next generation

Origin

Old English geoguth, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch jeugd, German Jugend, also to young.

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