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词汇 cosmos
释义

cosmos1

noun ˈkɒzmɒs
the cosmos
  • 1The universe seen as a well-ordered whole.

    (被看做有序整体的)宇宙

    he sat staring deep into the void, reminding himself of man's place in the cosmos

    他坐在那里凝视苍穹,提醒自己人类在宇宙中的位置。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Let us begin with the notion of the universe as cosmos.
    • While it is important to note the mutuality of aid among the three estates, it is equally important to note that social ordering, like the ordering of the cosmos as a whole, was firmly hierarchical.
    • Outer space, the cosmos, is a central element of what is regarded as psychedelic music.
    • For a pagan Platonist its particularity seemed scandalously incompatible with divine immutability and with a universal operation of providence in the cosmos as a whole.
    • In the space of seven years, the dark-energy revolution has rewritten textbook entries on how the universe operates and what will ultimately happen to the cosmos.
    • It operates within the larger context of the local community and the rhythms and relationship of nature and the cosmos.
    • She had expected them to eat as if seeking to become one with each grain, to chew the universe and swallow the cosmos.
    • But then on the other hand, the whole cosmos or universe is based on this love or compassion.
    • If we could learn to see mind as an essential rather than accidental aspect of the universe, a whole new sense of the cosmos and of ourselves would follow.
    • Those are parts of the cosmos, but not the whole of the cosmos.
    • Is ‘nature’ the cosmos rendered in anthropomorphic terms?
    • Any concern about the human relationship to the planet Earth is a vastly different consideration from that of the human relationship to the cosmos as a whole.
    • We respond to the luminous revelations of small transcendences rather than the ungraspable miracles of the universe or the cosmos.
    • In this time there arose a widespread belief in the Heat Death of the Universe, the idea that the cosmos as a whole would eventually fizzle out just as a bouncing ball gradually dissipates its energy and comes to rest.
    • The Goya concept is inspired by the idea of the cosmos, blending totality with the unspecific.
    • Their results suggest that the reionization of the cosmos occurred when the universe was 6-7 percent of its current age.
    • This is a unique look at the cosmos and the universe around us.
    • But even the cosmos as a whole is not seen as the spiritually empty universe of astrophysicists and evolutionists, but the universe understood liturgically and reciprocally as a Cosmic Man.
    • And this meant that the whole of the cosmos was seen to be informed by a kind of Logos - or divine reason - which was ordering its patterns.
    • Mathematical laws drive not only the microworld of atoms - and the forces linking them together - but the whole fabric of the cosmos.
    Synonyms
    macrocosm, totality, whole world, creation, space, outer space, the heavens, the firmament
    1. 1.1 A system of thought.
      (思想)体系
      the new gender-free intellectual cosmos

      新的无性别限制的知识体系。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • Should we, then, see Julian simply as a holdover from the premodern sacred cosmos?
      • Hinduism is a subtle, complex, multi-dimensional spiritual cosmos.
      • FW, who bares her heart selectively, creates a uterine cosmos, exclusively.
      • Such a reading must highly qualify, if not disallow, any notion of a sacred cosmos.
      • There were materialists who wholly denied the existence of that unseen spiritual cosmos of transmigration.

Origin

Middle English: from Greek kosmos 'order or world'.

  • The fact that both cosmos and cosmetic (early 17th century) go back to the same word, Greek kosmos gives an interesting insight into the way the ancient Greeks thought. Kosmos had a central meaning ‘order’, but was also used to mean ‘world’ and the putting of oneself in order that involved ‘adornment’.

cosmos2

noun ˈkɒzmɒs
  • An ornamental plant of the daisy family, which bears single brightly coloured flowers and is native to Mexico and warm regions of America.

    大波斯菊

    Genus Cosmos, family Compositae

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Plant members of the daisy family, cosmos and yarrow to encourage beneficials.
    • Love-in-a mist, four-o'clock, cosmos, nasturtium, globe amaranth, balsam, and larkspur are a few I remember from childhood.
    • Annuals such as snapdragons, cosmos, zinnias, etc., are also planted in early spring after the last frost.
    • When the weather warms up, sow seeds of cosmos, marigold, morning glory, portulaca, nasturtium, sunflower, and zinnia for splashes of color.
    • Chamomile and cosmos are two other composites you might consider when planning your garden for the sake of beneficial insects.
    • Sow annual flowers such as asters, cosmos, zinnias and marigolds as soon as the frost has passed and the air begins to warm up.
    • Reserve some space for colorful annuals like zinnia, marigold, calendula, alyssum, and cosmos.
    • Echo the fullness of the fruit in arrangements with berries and blooms, such as pale green nicotiana, chocolate cosmos, Oriental poppies, and viburnum.
    • Many of these flowers - especially the cosmos - attract butterflies and hummingbirds.
    • Or plant chocolate cosmos and chocolate daisies near a garden bench where you'd like visitors to stop and sit.
    • The cosmos and impatiens I planted this June may outlast me.
    • Goldfinches also feed on the seed of goldenrod, coreopsis, cosmos, zinnias, dandelions and other weedy plants.
    • Very fancy fences can be created from tall flowering annuals such as cleome, cosmos, dahlias, sweet peas and sunflowers for a display of spring, summer and autumn colour.
    • The blue shades of balloon flowers are striking when planted in combination with gold or deep orange cosmos or yarrows.
    • If you are tempted to plant annual flower seedlings, consider the most heat-tolerant ones such as petunias, calendulas, cosmos & African marigolds.
    • Later in the season there are many others such as coneflowers, cosmos, goldenrods, or lavender that they will enjoy.
    • To carry the container plantings through the last remaining warm days, replant them with late-summer annuals such as cosmos, marigolds, salvias, or zinnias.
    • A pink-flowered cosmos planted during the summer is at its best at the moment after spending the past few months developing bushy foliage with disappointingly few flowers.
    • Geraniums, dianthus, cosmos, sweet peas and even fuchsias are also popular.
    • A black and green garden collection of 96 plants costs £120 and includes dark dahlias, cosmos, perilla and scabiosa and green euphorbias, gladiolus and zinnia.

Origin

From Greek kosmos in the sense 'ornament'.

cosmos1

noun
the cosmos
  • 1The universe seen as a well-ordered whole.

    (被看做有序整体的)宇宙

    he sat staring deep into the void, reminding himself of his place in the cosmos

    他坐在那里凝视苍穹,提醒自己人类在宇宙中的位置。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Any concern about the human relationship to the planet Earth is a vastly different consideration from that of the human relationship to the cosmos as a whole.
    • The Goya concept is inspired by the idea of the cosmos, blending totality with the unspecific.
    • She had expected them to eat as if seeking to become one with each grain, to chew the universe and swallow the cosmos.
    • In the space of seven years, the dark-energy revolution has rewritten textbook entries on how the universe operates and what will ultimately happen to the cosmos.
    • Those are parts of the cosmos, but not the whole of the cosmos.
    • But then on the other hand, the whole cosmos or universe is based on this love or compassion.
    • Their results suggest that the reionization of the cosmos occurred when the universe was 6-7 percent of its current age.
    • It operates within the larger context of the local community and the rhythms and relationship of nature and the cosmos.
    • Mathematical laws drive not only the microworld of atoms - and the forces linking them together - but the whole fabric of the cosmos.
    • We respond to the luminous revelations of small transcendences rather than the ungraspable miracles of the universe or the cosmos.
    • If we could learn to see mind as an essential rather than accidental aspect of the universe, a whole new sense of the cosmos and of ourselves would follow.
    • For a pagan Platonist its particularity seemed scandalously incompatible with divine immutability and with a universal operation of providence in the cosmos as a whole.
    • And this meant that the whole of the cosmos was seen to be informed by a kind of Logos - or divine reason - which was ordering its patterns.
    • Is ‘nature’ the cosmos rendered in anthropomorphic terms?
    • While it is important to note the mutuality of aid among the three estates, it is equally important to note that social ordering, like the ordering of the cosmos as a whole, was firmly hierarchical.
    • Let us begin with the notion of the universe as cosmos.
    • In this time there arose a widespread belief in the Heat Death of the Universe, the idea that the cosmos as a whole would eventually fizzle out just as a bouncing ball gradually dissipates its energy and comes to rest.
    • This is a unique look at the cosmos and the universe around us.
    • But even the cosmos as a whole is not seen as the spiritually empty universe of astrophysicists and evolutionists, but the universe understood liturgically and reciprocally as a Cosmic Man.
    • Outer space, the cosmos, is a central element of what is regarded as psychedelic music.
    Synonyms
    macrocosm, totality, whole world, creation, space, outer space, the heavens, the firmament
    1. 1.1 A system of thought.
      (思想)体系
      the new gender-free intellectual cosmos

      新的无性别限制的知识体系。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • FW, who bares her heart selectively, creates a uterine cosmos, exclusively.
      • Such a reading must highly qualify, if not disallow, any notion of a sacred cosmos.
      • Hinduism is a subtle, complex, multi-dimensional spiritual cosmos.
      • Should we, then, see Julian simply as a holdover from the premodern sacred cosmos?
      • There were materialists who wholly denied the existence of that unseen spiritual cosmos of transmigration.

Origin

Middle English: from Greek kosmos ‘order or world’.

cosmos2

noun
  • An ornamental plant of the daisy family with single brightly colored flowers. Native to tropical America, it is widely grown as an ornamental.

    大波斯菊

    Genus Cosmos, family Compositae

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Or plant chocolate cosmos and chocolate daisies near a garden bench where you'd like visitors to stop and sit.
    • Reserve some space for colorful annuals like zinnia, marigold, calendula, alyssum, and cosmos.
    • Annuals such as snapdragons, cosmos, zinnias, etc., are also planted in early spring after the last frost.
    • Many of these flowers - especially the cosmos - attract butterflies and hummingbirds.
    • A pink-flowered cosmos planted during the summer is at its best at the moment after spending the past few months developing bushy foliage with disappointingly few flowers.
    • A black and green garden collection of 96 plants costs £120 and includes dark dahlias, cosmos, perilla and scabiosa and green euphorbias, gladiolus and zinnia.
    • Very fancy fences can be created from tall flowering annuals such as cleome, cosmos, dahlias, sweet peas and sunflowers for a display of spring, summer and autumn colour.
    • When the weather warms up, sow seeds of cosmos, marigold, morning glory, portulaca, nasturtium, sunflower, and zinnia for splashes of color.
    • The cosmos and impatiens I planted this June may outlast me.
    • The blue shades of balloon flowers are striking when planted in combination with gold or deep orange cosmos or yarrows.
    • Echo the fullness of the fruit in arrangements with berries and blooms, such as pale green nicotiana, chocolate cosmos, Oriental poppies, and viburnum.
    • Plant members of the daisy family, cosmos and yarrow to encourage beneficials.
    • Love-in-a mist, four-o'clock, cosmos, nasturtium, globe amaranth, balsam, and larkspur are a few I remember from childhood.
    • To carry the container plantings through the last remaining warm days, replant them with late-summer annuals such as cosmos, marigolds, salvias, or zinnias.
    • Goldfinches also feed on the seed of goldenrod, coreopsis, cosmos, zinnias, dandelions and other weedy plants.
    • If you are tempted to plant annual flower seedlings, consider the most heat-tolerant ones such as petunias, calendulas, cosmos & African marigolds.
    • Chamomile and cosmos are two other composites you might consider when planning your garden for the sake of beneficial insects.
    • Geraniums, dianthus, cosmos, sweet peas and even fuchsias are also popular.
    • Sow annual flowers such as asters, cosmos, zinnias and marigolds as soon as the frost has passed and the air begins to warm up.
    • Later in the season there are many others such as coneflowers, cosmos, goldenrods, or lavender that they will enjoy.

Origin

From Greek kosmos in the sense ‘ornament’.

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