stanza
英 ['stænzə]
美['stænzə]
- n. 演出期;局;场;诗的一节
英英释义
- 1. a fixed number of lines of verse forming a unit of a poem
实用场景例句
- A stanza is, literally, a room.
- stanza(诗节)的原意为“房间”。
柯林斯例句
- The troupe has agreed to be held over for another stanza.
- 剧团已经同意续演一期.
辞典例句
- The stanza ended, Marcos resumed his comments.
- 演出结束后, 马科斯继续评论.
辞典例句
- Many folk songs have " refrains ", that is, regularly repeated independent elements attached to each stanza.
- 许多民歌有 “ 重复句 ”, 即每一段都有规则地重复出现的单独句.
英汉非文学 - 民俗
- With every stanza, Annabel Lee is mentioned more than once.
- 每节, 安娜贝尔李提到不啻一次.
互联网
- There are six lines in every stanza.
- (诗的)每一节有六行.
互联网
- He improvised a new stanza for the school song at the football game.
- 他在足球赛中临时为校歌作新词.
互联网
- Yesterday afternoon, our school held the 15 th art stanza to chorused a game.
- 昨天下午, 我们学校举行了第十五届艺术节合唱比赛.
互联网
- This email Bcc to all on my email list so they can all share the stanza.
- 此电邮以密件传给我名单中所有的人以便大家都能分享此启请颂.
互联网
- Before this stanza there are stanzas dealing with Zeus, the Father of the gods.
- 在这节之前,有几节是关于上帝之父宙斯.
互联网
- Certainly, the young talented person is a leading role that tile stanza is real well - deserved.
- 当然, 年青人才是瓦伦丁节真正当之无愧的主角.
互联网
中文词源
stanza 诗节,段
来自意大利语 stanza,诗节,段,词源同 stand,stance.
助记提示
1. Etymologically, a stanza is a place where one 'stands' or stops.
2. stand => stanza.
3. from the notion of 'stopping' at the end of a section.
2. stand => stanza.
3. from the notion of 'stopping' at the end of a section.
双语例句
- 1. A stanza is, literally, a room.
- stanza(诗节)的原意为“房间”。
来自柯林斯例句
- 2. He's reading the second stanza.
- 他正在读诗的第二节。
来自辞典例句
- 3. The troupe has agreed to be held over for another stanza.
- 剧团已经同意续演一期.
来自辞典例句
- 4. The stanza ended, Marcos resumed his comments.
- 演出结束后, 马科斯继续评论.
来自辞典例句
- 5. We omitted the second stanza.
- 我们略去了这首诗的第二段.
来自辞典例句
英文词源
- stanza
- stanza: [16] Etymologically, a stanza is a place where one ‘stands’ or stops. The word was borrowed from Italian stanza, a descendant of Vulgar Latin *stantia ‘standing, stopping-place’, which in turn was derived from the present participle of Latin stāre ‘stand’ (source of English stage, state, station, etc). Its application to a ‘verse of poetry’ arose in Italian from the notion of ‘stopping’ at the end of a section. Stanza was borrowed into French as stance, from which English gets stance [16].
=> stance, stand, state, station - stanza (n.)
- "group of rhymed verse lines," 1580s, from Italian stanza "verse of a poem," originally "standing, stopping place," from Vulgar Latin *stantia "a stanza of verse," so called from the stop at the end of it, from Latin stantem (nominative stans), present participle of stare "to stand," from PIE root *sta- "to stand, set down, make or be firm" (see stet). Related: Stanzaic.
词态变化
复数: stanzas;