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单词 bravo
释义

bravo1

exclamation brɑːˈvəʊˈbrɑːvəʊˈbrɑvoʊ
  • Used to express approval when a performer or other person has done something well.

    好啊,妙

    bravo, you're improving!
    Example sentencesExamples
    • ‘That was wonderful, Andrews, bravo,’ she said nodding her head and clapping.
    • Her parents would clap and say bravo and her dad would look at her like someone who has the special insight to realize those moments were the best of his life.
    • Because he was there and he'd come on the stage and say, ‘Oh, good morning…’ and the audience would go ‘Ahh bravo!’
    • Put at its most basic, I admire women who are happy, and if that happiness comes from domesticity rather than promotion, well, bravo.
    • But there again, she went for a color and something different and bravo, why not?
    • And if he wins out under those circumstances, bravo!
    • A good writer, like a good painter or a good musician, can break all the rules he himself most lives by, and if it's done brilliantly, then bravo.
    • ‘Political content is one thing, it's a genre, and when they are done well, bravo,’ he nods.
    • My mother and sister and I watched my dad tell the press off that morning, and at the end of the speech my mother just stood up and said, bravo!
    • If readers at times have difficulty in making sense, so did I: if they can decipher certain allusions, bravo!
    • Another unhappy aspect of applause - or shouts of bravo, brava, or bravi, not to mention those rock-concert-style whoops of pleased amazement - is the way in which it breaks into the mood of the dance.
    • When one shouted out her age as ‘eight’ in English, the woman applauded and congratulated her in English ‘Good girl, very good, bravo!’
    • A big thanks to our special guests, those who worked in the Erris lace schools during the 40's and 50's, who braved a cold and blustery night to be present, bravo!
    • At the end people shouted bravo and clapped for several bows.
    • It's twenty-eight years too late, but bravo, James, for being relentlessly Spock-like!
    • The man behind me, who was also in the cheap seats, repeatedly shouted bravo.
    • I find myself so sympathetic to the arguments of this book, and particularly its central thesis, that I find it difficult to offer any critical comments other than: bravo!
    • I haven't had the guts to try that thing yet; bravo to you for doing so.
    • Indeed, Digby, bravo on mastering the art of the paraphrase in mere weeks.
    • And I think, bravo to her to come to this gym at all.
    Synonyms
    well done, good for you, congratulations, take a bow, encore
nounPlural bravoes, Plural bravos brɑːˈvəʊˈbrɑːvəʊˈbrɑvoʊ
  • 1A cry of bravo.

    喝彩声

    bravos rang out

    突然响起一片喝彩声。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • In the meantime, the miraculous score is nobly treated by Levine and a superior cast of singers, and for that alone, the Met's efforts on behalf of Berlioz deserved all the opening-night bravos.
    • Cheers, bravos and applause rang out through the large concert hall, as the performers left the stage.
    • But the new restrictions - limiting Cuban Americans' trips to Havana and restricting the gifts and cash they can send to family members - didn't win the bravos the Administration had been banking on.
    • Overall, the ballet offered a deft balance of theatricality and virtuosity, resulting in two very accessible productions that had the audience on their feet yelling bravos by night's end.
    • She gets an ovation, even before the first note, in the ritual that, like the hearty applause and worshipful bravos between each song, sets her in stone as the ‘grand lady of French song.’
    • The audience thanked Lorin Maazel and the orchestra for that half with enthusiastic applause, standing ovations, and bravos.
    • Her every variation was accompanied by bravos.
    • Finally, as she bowed alone in front of the curtain amidst the bravos and shouts, she mouthed the words, ‘Thank you.’
    • Werther's main aria, I think, was stellar and received lots of applause and bravos.
    • The theatre was full, and echoing to cheers, stamps and bravos.
    • Shafer was rightly showered with wild applause and bravos after Act I, to which she responded with faux-incredulous gestures of ‘Me?’
    • Upon the last notes' reverberations being lost in the Coolidge Auditorium, the crowd broke into enthusiastic applause and bravos such as I have not witnessed in Washington before.
    • Feet stomping, bravos, and determined clapping made it clear that nobody was willing to go home, and brought the singer back on stage for his encore.
    • Only when the singer looks up again into the audience, after endless seconds of being lost in a land of musical perfection, the applause and bravos break over the two men.
  • 2A code word representing the letter B, used in radio communication.

    (无线电通信中)字母B的代码

    Example sentencesExamples
    • You'll have an extra soldier at your disposal that you can move between your alpha and bravo team.
    • This carries over to every level, right down to the new soldier who is now both a rifleman and squad designated marksman on alpha team, or a rifleman and Javelin gunner on bravo team.
    • The first leg was uneventful until we approached point bravo and set up for a tactical ridge crossing.
    • I immediately raised the flaps and began full braking, slowing enough to take an instinctive left turn off the runway onto taxiway bravo as the prop windmilled to a halt.
    • Well, what they had was a series of camps: alpha, bravo, Charlie, et cetera.
    • We were scheduled for post-maintenance functional check flight bravo and charlie profiles.
    • Cancel matrix twelve, and change to bravo seven.

Origin

Mid 18th century: from French, from Italian, literally 'bold' (see brave).

Rhymes

aglow, ago, alow, although, apropos, art nouveau, Bamako, Bardot, beau, Beaujolais Nouveau, below, bestow, blow, bo, Boileau, bons mots, Bordeaux, Bow, bro, cachepot, cheerio, Coe, crow, Defoe, de trop, doe, doh, dos-à-dos, do-si-do, dough, dzo, Flo, floe, flow, foe, foreknow, foreshow, forgo, Foucault, froe, glow, go, good-oh, go-slow, grow, gung-ho, Heathrow, heave-ho, heigh-ho, hello, ho, hoe, ho-ho, jo, Joe, kayo, know, lo, low, maillot, malapropos, Marceau, mho, Miró, mo, Mohs, Monroe, mot, mow, Munro, no, Noh, no-show, oh, oho, outgo, outgrow, owe, Perrault, pho, po, Poe, pro, quid pro quo, reshow, righto, roe, Rouault, row, Rowe, sew, shew, show, sloe, slow, snow, so, soh, sow, status quo, stow, Stowe, strow, tally-ho, though, throw, tic-tac-toe, to-and-fro, toe, touch-and-go, tow, trow, undergo, undersow, voe, whacko, whoa, wo, woe, Xuzhou, yo, yo-ho-ho, Zhengzhou, Zhou arvo, centavo, multum in parvo, octavo

bravo2

nounPlural bravoes, Plural bravos ˈbrɑːvəʊˈbrɑvoʊ
  • A thug or hired assassin.

    暴徒;(被人雇用的)杀手

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Men have before hired bravos to transact their crimes, while their own person and reputation sat under shelter.
    • The second time, I read the part about the bravos.
    • Their quarters were wretched enough, but the bad side of Riverside was worse than most, and the tavern's location brought them face-to-face with half the city's would-be bravos with predictable results.
    • Satisfied that no other bravos were abiding beyond it, he dragged the dead man by his sandaled feet into the room.
    • Maybe the bravos in the night would stalk him to get a piece of that leather doublet and linen shirt for themselves…
    • True, in the city nobody would think twice about Elanor, but Jinx knew that sooner or later some drunken bravo or arrogant mage would insult him, or he'd get mobbed by a pack of thieves, or ordered to leave by the city government.

Origin

Late 16th century: from Italian, from bravo 'bold (one)' (see brave).

bravo1

exclamationˈbrävōˈbrɑvoʊ
  • Used to express approval when a performer or other person has done something well.

    好啊,妙

    people kept on clapping and shouting “bravo!”

    人们一直不停地拍手欢呼“好啊!”。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • I haven't had the guts to try that thing yet; bravo to you for doing so.
    • Put at its most basic, I admire women who are happy, and if that happiness comes from domesticity rather than promotion, well, bravo.
    • At the end people shouted bravo and clapped for several bows.
    • The man behind me, who was also in the cheap seats, repeatedly shouted bravo.
    • Her parents would clap and say bravo and her dad would look at her like someone who has the special insight to realize those moments were the best of his life.
    • ‘That was wonderful, Andrews, bravo,’ she said nodding her head and clapping.
    • Because he was there and he'd come on the stage and say, ‘Oh, good morning…’ and the audience would go ‘Ahh bravo!’
    • But there again, she went for a color and something different and bravo, why not?
    • When one shouted out her age as ‘eight’ in English, the woman applauded and congratulated her in English ‘Good girl, very good, bravo!’
    • And I think, bravo to her to come to this gym at all.
    • If readers at times have difficulty in making sense, so did I: if they can decipher certain allusions, bravo!
    • It's twenty-eight years too late, but bravo, James, for being relentlessly Spock-like!
    • A big thanks to our special guests, those who worked in the Erris lace schools during the 40's and 50's, who braved a cold and blustery night to be present, bravo!
    • A good writer, like a good painter or a good musician, can break all the rules he himself most lives by, and if it's done brilliantly, then bravo.
    • I find myself so sympathetic to the arguments of this book, and particularly its central thesis, that I find it difficult to offer any critical comments other than: bravo!
    • Another unhappy aspect of applause - or shouts of bravo, brava, or bravi, not to mention those rock-concert-style whoops of pleased amazement - is the way in which it breaks into the mood of the dance.
    • My mother and sister and I watched my dad tell the press off that morning, and at the end of the speech my mother just stood up and said, bravo!
    • And if he wins out under those circumstances, bravo!
    • Indeed, Digby, bravo on mastering the art of the paraphrase in mere weeks.
    • ‘Political content is one thing, it's a genre, and when they are done well, bravo,’ he nods.
    Synonyms
    well done, good for you, congratulations, take a bow, encore
nounˈbrävōˈbrɑvoʊ
  • 1A cry of bravo.

    喝彩声

    bravos rang out

    突然响起一片喝彩声。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Overall, the ballet offered a deft balance of theatricality and virtuosity, resulting in two very accessible productions that had the audience on their feet yelling bravos by night's end.
    • She gets an ovation, even before the first note, in the ritual that, like the hearty applause and worshipful bravos between each song, sets her in stone as the ‘grand lady of French song.’
    • In the meantime, the miraculous score is nobly treated by Levine and a superior cast of singers, and for that alone, the Met's efforts on behalf of Berlioz deserved all the opening-night bravos.
    • Her every variation was accompanied by bravos.
    • Werther's main aria, I think, was stellar and received lots of applause and bravos.
    • Finally, as she bowed alone in front of the curtain amidst the bravos and shouts, she mouthed the words, ‘Thank you.’
    • But the new restrictions - limiting Cuban Americans' trips to Havana and restricting the gifts and cash they can send to family members - didn't win the bravos the Administration had been banking on.
    • Only when the singer looks up again into the audience, after endless seconds of being lost in a land of musical perfection, the applause and bravos break over the two men.
    • Shafer was rightly showered with wild applause and bravos after Act I, to which she responded with faux-incredulous gestures of ‘Me?’
    • The theatre was full, and echoing to cheers, stamps and bravos.
    • Cheers, bravos and applause rang out through the large concert hall, as the performers left the stage.
    • Feet stomping, bravos, and determined clapping made it clear that nobody was willing to go home, and brought the singer back on stage for his encore.
    • Upon the last notes' reverberations being lost in the Coolidge Auditorium, the crowd broke into enthusiastic applause and bravos such as I have not witnessed in Washington before.
    • The audience thanked Lorin Maazel and the orchestra for that half with enthusiastic applause, standing ovations, and bravos.
  • 2A code word representing the letter B, used in radio communication.

    (无线电通信中)字母B的代码

    Example sentencesExamples
    • We were scheduled for post-maintenance functional check flight bravo and charlie profiles.
    • Well, what they had was a series of camps: alpha, bravo, Charlie, et cetera.
    • This carries over to every level, right down to the new soldier who is now both a rifleman and squad designated marksman on alpha team, or a rifleman and Javelin gunner on bravo team.
    • The first leg was uneventful until we approached point bravo and set up for a tactical ridge crossing.
    • I immediately raised the flaps and began full braking, slowing enough to take an instinctive left turn off the runway onto taxiway bravo as the prop windmilled to a halt.
    • Cancel matrix twelve, and change to bravo seven.
    • You'll have an extra soldier at your disposal that you can move between your alpha and bravo team.

Origin

Mid 18th century: from French, from Italian, literally ‘bold’ (see brave).

bravo2

nounˈbrävōˈbrɑvoʊ
  • A thug or hired assassin.

    暴徒;(被人雇用的)杀手

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The second time, I read the part about the bravos.
    • Their quarters were wretched enough, but the bad side of Riverside was worse than most, and the tavern's location brought them face-to-face with half the city's would-be bravos with predictable results.
    • Satisfied that no other bravos were abiding beyond it, he dragged the dead man by his sandaled feet into the room.
    • True, in the city nobody would think twice about Elanor, but Jinx knew that sooner or later some drunken bravo or arrogant mage would insult him, or he'd get mobbed by a pack of thieves, or ordered to leave by the city government.
    • Maybe the bravos in the night would stalk him to get a piece of that leather doublet and linen shirt for themselves…
    • Men have before hired bravos to transact their crimes, while their own person and reputation sat under shelter.

Origin

Late 16th century: from Italian, from bravo ‘bold (one)’ (see brave).

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更新时间:2024/10/19 18:32:45