释义 |
Definition of bullring in English: bullringnounˈbʊlrɪŋˈbʊlˌrɪŋ An arena where bullfights are held. 斗牛场 Example sentencesExamples - The course ends in a bullring where the toros were to face matadors in the afternoon.
- Bullfighting as we know it today, started in the village squares, and became formalised, with the building of the bullring in Ronda in the late 18th century.
- At the end of the 19th century there were three bullrings in Barcelona, now there is just one left.
- The Spanish national sport of bullfighting originated in Andalusia, where Spain's oldest bullrings are located (in Seville and Ronda).
- Four years later, in the large bullring at the town of Puerto de Santa María, near Cádiz, he faced six bulls in a bullfight fought in honour of women.
- Tickets prices vary considerably depending on the bullring, the bullfighters and the occasion.
- They must never have faced a man on foot before they enter the bullring.
- Tickets are available from street sellers for €25, though we bought two for €30 from one of the many vendors outside the bullring about ten minutes before the bullfight.
- This does not include the subsidies given to individual bullrings by local and regional councils.
- He leapt into a bullring at the age of nine and began his professional career at the age of twelve.
- They were the Picadors, the pariahs of the bullring.
- Forty thousand bulls are slaughtered in Spanish bullrings every year in the most horrific of ways.
- Like the matador in a bullring, the more the crowd cheers, the more he will entertain.
- Two years earlier he had made his debut in the bullring as a rejoneador, a bullfighter on horseback who carries a lance to kill the bull.
- Early reviews invoking the album's ‘Southwestern’ influences should be forgiven; surely they meant southwestern Spain, home to the Andalucia province and its many bullrings.
- This season is crucial for her, since she needs to succeed as a matador in first-class bullrings, as she has as a novillero.
- One week later, the youngster was jolted into a new world of mountains, crowded markets, bullrings, and spectacle.
- Penicillin, in fact, saved so many lives in its early days that statues of Alexander Fleming were erected at many bullrings around Spain.
- Although there are still supporters of bullfighting, only the Monumental bullring now holds fights in the Catalan capital.
- Finito has spared many bulls throughout his career in bullrings such as Córdoba, where the admiring fans have made him feel the true pride of a true matador.
Definition of bullring in US English: bullringnounˈbo͝olˌriNGˈbʊlˌrɪŋ An arena where bullfights are held. 斗牛场 Example sentencesExamples - They were the Picadors, the pariahs of the bullring.
- Four years later, in the large bullring at the town of Puerto de Santa María, near Cádiz, he faced six bulls in a bullfight fought in honour of women.
- The course ends in a bullring where the toros were to face matadors in the afternoon.
- This season is crucial for her, since she needs to succeed as a matador in first-class bullrings, as she has as a novillero.
- This does not include the subsidies given to individual bullrings by local and regional councils.
- Early reviews invoking the album's ‘Southwestern’ influences should be forgiven; surely they meant southwestern Spain, home to the Andalucia province and its many bullrings.
- Tickets prices vary considerably depending on the bullring, the bullfighters and the occasion.
- Although there are still supporters of bullfighting, only the Monumental bullring now holds fights in the Catalan capital.
- Bullfighting as we know it today, started in the village squares, and became formalised, with the building of the bullring in Ronda in the late 18th century.
- Forty thousand bulls are slaughtered in Spanish bullrings every year in the most horrific of ways.
- At the end of the 19th century there were three bullrings in Barcelona, now there is just one left.
- Finito has spared many bulls throughout his career in bullrings such as Córdoba, where the admiring fans have made him feel the true pride of a true matador.
- Like the matador in a bullring, the more the crowd cheers, the more he will entertain.
- Penicillin, in fact, saved so many lives in its early days that statues of Alexander Fleming were erected at many bullrings around Spain.
- Tickets are available from street sellers for €25, though we bought two for €30 from one of the many vendors outside the bullring about ten minutes before the bullfight.
- One week later, the youngster was jolted into a new world of mountains, crowded markets, bullrings, and spectacle.
- Two years earlier he had made his debut in the bullring as a rejoneador, a bullfighter on horseback who carries a lance to kill the bull.
- The Spanish national sport of bullfighting originated in Andalusia, where Spain's oldest bullrings are located (in Seville and Ronda).
- He leapt into a bullring at the age of nine and began his professional career at the age of twelve.
- They must never have faced a man on foot before they enter the bullring.
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