释义 |
Definition of boulevard in English: boulevardnoun ˈbuːləvɑːdˈbʊləˌvɑrd A wide street in a town or city, typically one lined with trees. 林荫大道 in names Sunset Boulevard 日落大道。 Example sentencesExamples - On the banks of the Danube, it is a city of lazy boulevards and pleasant cafes.
- According to the municipality, 589 snowploughs had been cleaning the snow from the major streets and boulevards of the city.
- Soon they were away from the busy, narrow little streets and into elegant, wide boulevards.
- The boulevards are very wide and the city seems to be a sea of green!
- Schools and community centers, streets and avenues, boulevards and bridges throughout the United States were named after him.
- The city itself was quite charming, featuring wide, tree-lined boulevards.
- An ubiquitous yellow cab halted briefly, on request, in one of the several boulevards lining this meticulously planned capital.
- This involved crossing wide French-style boulevards by foot, and nerves of steel are required.
- It was a European-style city with grand boulevards, classical buildings, a great cathedral and an opera house as well as a theatre.
- The BCC took on numerous projects to develop huge parks and boulevards in the city in the recent years.
- All these freeways and boulevards have several lanes, with all the cars going in one direction.
- I've dedicated a healthy portion of my life walking the streets and boulevards of Paris to find grainy bread here.
- The city had cordoned off an area of about nine square blocks with Main Street the central boulevard for the party.
- New roads were constructed as wide boulevards to prevent fires from spreading from one side of the street to the other.
- The march initially proceeded along O'Connell Street, a broad boulevard in the city centre.
- I'd never been to Beverly Hills before, and the boulevards and streets had names that were mythology to me.
- There is the ground-level city of streets and boulevards, and offices and homes.
- It is particularly fitting that one of our finest boulevards in the city be chosen.
- I took his hand and we strolled slowly through the empty streets and quiet boulevards until we reached the royal gardens.
- By the time the march reached the other end of town, it had grown to nearly half a mile long, taking up both sides of the wide boulevards that crisscross Pittsburgh.
Synonyms avenue, street, road, main road, high road, drive, row, lane, parade, promenade, way, roadway, thoroughfare North American strip, highway
OriginMid 18th century: French, 'a rampart' (later 'a promenade on the site of one'), from German Bollwerk (see bulwark). The first boulevards referred to in English were in Paris, in the mid 18th century. They were wide avenues planted with trees, originally on the top of demolished fortifications. The word boulevard then meant ‘the horizontal portion of a rampart’ in French. It derives from the same German and Dutch word as bulwark (Late Middle English), and its elements are related to bole (ME from Old Norse), ‘the stem or trunk of a tree’, and work. The French boulevard also gave us the boulevardier, a person who frequented the boulevards, and so a wealthy, fashionable socialite, in the late 19th century.
Definition of boulevard in US English: boulevard(also blvd.) nounˈbo͝oləˌvärdˈbʊləˌvɑrd A wide street in a town or city, typically one lined with trees. 林荫大道 in names Sunset Boulevard 日落大道。 Example sentencesExamples - The BCC took on numerous projects to develop huge parks and boulevards in the city in the recent years.
- All these freeways and boulevards have several lanes, with all the cars going in one direction.
- Schools and community centers, streets and avenues, boulevards and bridges throughout the United States were named after him.
- According to the municipality, 589 snowploughs had been cleaning the snow from the major streets and boulevards of the city.
- On the banks of the Danube, it is a city of lazy boulevards and pleasant cafes.
- It was a European-style city with grand boulevards, classical buildings, a great cathedral and an opera house as well as a theatre.
- The boulevards are very wide and the city seems to be a sea of green!
- The city itself was quite charming, featuring wide, tree-lined boulevards.
- The city had cordoned off an area of about nine square blocks with Main Street the central boulevard for the party.
- I'd never been to Beverly Hills before, and the boulevards and streets had names that were mythology to me.
- There is the ground-level city of streets and boulevards, and offices and homes.
- By the time the march reached the other end of town, it had grown to nearly half a mile long, taking up both sides of the wide boulevards that crisscross Pittsburgh.
- The march initially proceeded along O'Connell Street, a broad boulevard in the city centre.
- This involved crossing wide French-style boulevards by foot, and nerves of steel are required.
- It is particularly fitting that one of our finest boulevards in the city be chosen.
- An ubiquitous yellow cab halted briefly, on request, in one of the several boulevards lining this meticulously planned capital.
- Soon they were away from the busy, narrow little streets and into elegant, wide boulevards.
- I've dedicated a healthy portion of my life walking the streets and boulevards of Paris to find grainy bread here.
- I took his hand and we strolled slowly through the empty streets and quiet boulevards until we reached the royal gardens.
- New roads were constructed as wide boulevards to prevent fires from spreading from one side of the street to the other.
Synonyms avenue, street, road, main road, high road, drive, row, lane, parade, promenade, way, roadway, thoroughfare
OriginMid 18th century: French, ‘a rampart’ (later ‘a promenade on the site of one’), from German Bollwerk (see bulwark). |