释义 |
Definition of merrymaking in English: merrymakingnoun ˈmɛrɪmeɪkɪŋˈmɛriˌmeɪkɪŋ mass nounFun; festivity. I'd had my fill of merrymaking and decided to stay put till my headache eased Example sentencesExamples - His earlier genre scenes concentrate on peasants merrymaking or brawling in houses, taverns, or barns.
- I've hardly known a bloke who did not like the merrymaking, that Christimas epitomises.
- The wider feelings of distrust or dislike for the Irish harbored by some passengers on board were concentrated in the disapproval of their dancing and general merrymaking.
- After an evening of requisite merrymaking, I eventually summoned forth the energy to stumble out of bed the next day and wander the short distance from my hotel to the event grounds.
- He heard a few reactionary mutterings of disappointment amongst the barflies; staff smashing glasses was the height of sophisticated merrymaking after a certain volume of arm-bending.
- More ceilidh dancing, drinking and merrymaking.
- For that authentic, sweaty, draft-drenched night-at-the-Commie experience, you're ironically advised to consider the Sidetrack Café for your New Year's merrymaking.
- While our brothers and sisters in Aceh were experiencing a great calamity, some of us were indulging in convivial merrymaking at luxury hotels on New Year's Eve.
- Finally, scholars trace the ‘Santa Claus’ story to an incident in which an intoxicated Saint Nicholas returned home after a winter's night of merrymaking, surprised to find his house keys no longer worked.
- Call it the urge to shake a leg or a penchant for merrymaking or an ideal mix of fun and entertainment.
- The juxtaposition of a park for merrymaking alongside a park designed to evoke a sense of debt owed past sacrifice accounted for the shrine's broad-based appeal.
- I tell them to celebrate widely, and I ask the police not to lock them up just because they are merrymaking.
- I can not believe a nation as addicted to drinking, hunting, fighting and riotous merrymaking as the English didn't have some rousing folk music in the past.
- More raucous merrymaking took place in public spaces as artisans and farmers raised liberty poles and enlisted men fired thirteen-gun salutes.
- Throughout the European countryside, the culmination of harvest season has always been a cue for thanksgiving and merrymaking, a time to kill the fatted calf, crack open a few bottles, have a dance and get seasonally sloshed.
- It was supposed to contain not a jot of propaganda, to be all sheer art, merrymaking, and the euphoria of proud toil.
- In three decades of celebrations, friendly gatherings, bashes, and general merrymaking, I've never experienced anything quite like it.
- Which is reason enough to celebrate, although it has taken awhile for the members of Radke's bargaining team to climb on board for the merrymaking.
- None of the merrymaking warriors is looking towards where a long column of tiny figures is stealthily descending upon them.
- Nozomi will bear no grudge; for it detracts from his happiness and capacity for merrymaking.
- Little did the complacent Bezirk know that West German accounts of the very same meetings spoke of laughter, merrymaking and private house parties.
- Em was not isolated from the merrymaking - against her will, of course.
- But all the merrymaking ends when the trial begins.
- Few of us sit down every day, as they do across much of Europe, for a relaxing family meal that could take up to three hours of fun-filled banter and merrymaking to consume.
- The hours of merrymaking and celebration had stretched late the night before, and she suspected there would be more than one person who took carris seed before the ceremony.
- They also abandoned whole towns to go merrymaking.
- Yet the din emanating from the country's corporate boardrooms is not that of clinking champagne glasses and boisterous merrymaking.
- This is most evident in the second movement, described as having ‘a sense of animation and urgency’ which feels more like merrymaking under duress.
- General merrymaking on the second day of Easter includes the rolling of Easter eggs, games to test one's strength, and swinging on swings.
- Christmas trees, lights, candles, trimmings and turkeys will be among the things turning seasonal merrymaking into misery and mayhem for Swindon families over the holiday period.
- All around me, the merrymaking sounds of the party continued on, but I was oblivious.
- Large inset windows reveal generic scenes of merrymaking inside the pub.
- Peals of laughter and merrymaking yelled out through the wood door.
- I broke my tune, and raised my head in the merrymaking's direction.
- On Friday the Museum of Richmond hosts Come Forth and Play, a look at engravings of merrymaking, playing Tudor games and making a Nine Men's Morris.
- So the goofy Greeks decorated their merrymaking in pretty bows and successfully sublimated their impulses with constrictive ceremonial routines.
- The Ati-atihan festival in honor of Santo Nino, one of the most revered Roman Catholic icons in the Philippines, was stopped, turning merrymaking into mourning for the victims.
- Participating in the merrymaking occurs amongst all regardless if one is employed or unemployed.
- We do not smirk at the misery or the merrymaking of immoral culture.
- In all of this merrymaking, I cannot overlook the meticulous research into instruments and music that preludes such an undertaking.
Synonyms high spirits, high-spiritedness, exuberance Definition of merrymaking in US English: merrymakingnounˈmɛriˌmeɪkɪŋˈmerēˌmākiNG The process of enjoying oneself with others, especially by dancing and drinking. 尽情欢乐,欢宴作乐 I'd had my fill of merrymaking and decided to stay put till my headache eased Example sentencesExamples - On Friday the Museum of Richmond hosts Come Forth and Play, a look at engravings of merrymaking, playing Tudor games and making a Nine Men's Morris.
- The juxtaposition of a park for merrymaking alongside a park designed to evoke a sense of debt owed past sacrifice accounted for the shrine's broad-based appeal.
- For that authentic, sweaty, draft-drenched night-at-the-Commie experience, you're ironically advised to consider the Sidetrack Café for your New Year's merrymaking.
- I can not believe a nation as addicted to drinking, hunting, fighting and riotous merrymaking as the English didn't have some rousing folk music in the past.
- Few of us sit down every day, as they do across much of Europe, for a relaxing family meal that could take up to three hours of fun-filled banter and merrymaking to consume.
- The hours of merrymaking and celebration had stretched late the night before, and she suspected there would be more than one person who took carris seed before the ceremony.
- Which is reason enough to celebrate, although it has taken awhile for the members of Radke's bargaining team to climb on board for the merrymaking.
- But all the merrymaking ends when the trial begins.
- More ceilidh dancing, drinking and merrymaking.
- While our brothers and sisters in Aceh were experiencing a great calamity, some of us were indulging in convivial merrymaking at luxury hotels on New Year's Eve.
- This is most evident in the second movement, described as having ‘a sense of animation and urgency’ which feels more like merrymaking under duress.
- Christmas trees, lights, candles, trimmings and turkeys will be among the things turning seasonal merrymaking into misery and mayhem for Swindon families over the holiday period.
- Nozomi will bear no grudge; for it detracts from his happiness and capacity for merrymaking.
- He heard a few reactionary mutterings of disappointment amongst the barflies; staff smashing glasses was the height of sophisticated merrymaking after a certain volume of arm-bending.
- More raucous merrymaking took place in public spaces as artisans and farmers raised liberty poles and enlisted men fired thirteen-gun salutes.
- The Ati-atihan festival in honor of Santo Nino, one of the most revered Roman Catholic icons in the Philippines, was stopped, turning merrymaking into mourning for the victims.
- Yet the din emanating from the country's corporate boardrooms is not that of clinking champagne glasses and boisterous merrymaking.
- Call it the urge to shake a leg or a penchant for merrymaking or an ideal mix of fun and entertainment.
- Throughout the European countryside, the culmination of harvest season has always been a cue for thanksgiving and merrymaking, a time to kill the fatted calf, crack open a few bottles, have a dance and get seasonally sloshed.
- Large inset windows reveal generic scenes of merrymaking inside the pub.
- I tell them to celebrate widely, and I ask the police not to lock them up just because they are merrymaking.
- All around me, the merrymaking sounds of the party continued on, but I was oblivious.
- Peals of laughter and merrymaking yelled out through the wood door.
- His earlier genre scenes concentrate on peasants merrymaking or brawling in houses, taverns, or barns.
- They also abandoned whole towns to go merrymaking.
- Finally, scholars trace the ‘Santa Claus’ story to an incident in which an intoxicated Saint Nicholas returned home after a winter's night of merrymaking, surprised to find his house keys no longer worked.
- Little did the complacent Bezirk know that West German accounts of the very same meetings spoke of laughter, merrymaking and private house parties.
- Em was not isolated from the merrymaking - against her will, of course.
- It was supposed to contain not a jot of propaganda, to be all sheer art, merrymaking, and the euphoria of proud toil.
- We do not smirk at the misery or the merrymaking of immoral culture.
- None of the merrymaking warriors is looking towards where a long column of tiny figures is stealthily descending upon them.
- General merrymaking on the second day of Easter includes the rolling of Easter eggs, games to test one's strength, and swinging on swings.
- In three decades of celebrations, friendly gatherings, bashes, and general merrymaking, I've never experienced anything quite like it.
- I've hardly known a bloke who did not like the merrymaking, that Christimas epitomises.
- After an evening of requisite merrymaking, I eventually summoned forth the energy to stumble out of bed the next day and wander the short distance from my hotel to the event grounds.
- So the goofy Greeks decorated their merrymaking in pretty bows and successfully sublimated their impulses with constrictive ceremonial routines.
- In all of this merrymaking, I cannot overlook the meticulous research into instruments and music that preludes such an undertaking.
- The wider feelings of distrust or dislike for the Irish harbored by some passengers on board were concentrated in the disapproval of their dancing and general merrymaking.
- I broke my tune, and raised my head in the merrymaking's direction.
- Participating in the merrymaking occurs amongst all regardless if one is employed or unemployed.
Synonyms high spirits, high-spiritedness, exuberance |