释义 |
Definition of crowd-pleaser in English: crowd-pleasernoun A person or thing with great popular appeal. 受大众欢迎的人(或物) once again, the group has produced an album which is bound to be a crowd-pleaser 这个乐队又一次推出了一张一定会得到大家喜欢的专辑。 Example sentencesExamples - He speaks reverently about his fans and their dedication to his music, and he's a genuine crowd-pleaser when it comes to playing the songs they want to hear.
- The main flaw of this show - designed to be a crowd-pleaser in many ways - is its lack of critical engagement with the photographer's own claims about her work.
- So although it was a crowd-pleaser with magnificent tutus, there were heart-stopping moments as young dancers struggled to fully realise difficult choreography.
- He once gave us gorgeously-designed spectacles that not only challenged Hollywood's hegemony over blockbuster crowd-pleasers, but beat Hollywood at its own game by making his blockbusters smarter and more stylish.
- There are far more people at their concerts these days; possibly because they avoid most of their own albums, and play some old-time crowd-pleasers.
- The evidence suggests that reinventions, in any guises and at whichever end of the scale, are surefire crowd-pleasers.
- I've liked both albums they've released, and it was good to hear the crowd-pleasers and so on being performed - but somewhere along the line there's just needs to be some variety.
- Football chairmen should rise above being simply crowd-pleasers.
- The crowd-pleasers always get the spotlight, while the straight men do their stuff.
- Certainly it's a crowd-pleaser, coming away with the audience prize from several world-class film festivals.
- It was a crowd-pleaser, the number one protest song.
- The lack of substance in Hollywood crowd-pleasers is constantly decried, harking back to some golden moment in the 1970s or even the 1930s, when films could stimulate the mind as well as satiate the senses.
- Their wonderfully playful set took in reggae and funk as well as the reliably prickly outbursts of their infectious and catchy crowd-pleasers.
- By their nature, sports movies are crowd-pleasers.
- With dates in Singapore, Taiwan, Indonesia and the Philippines ahead of her this week the songstress insists that she will continue to play the crowd-pleasers despite hating some of the songs.
- I mean, don't tell me that I'm turning into a politician, skipping over the real problems to focus on the flashy, easily remedied crowd-pleasers.
- She was a clever theatre programmer who would mix crowd-pleasers with less obvious work and still keep the punters coming.
- Drum solos are reliable crowd-pleasers: the audience goes wild; the rest of the band gets a breather.
- He moved to Las Vegas and lived there, he moved to Hawaii and lived there; by 1974, he was earning up to $US20,000 a week, belting out crowd-pleasers in his big, big voice.
- Catching only the last few songs from this band was disappointing as they seemed to be a big crowd-pleaser and when the end came there was lots of shouting and clapping for more.
Synonyms attraction, focus, focal point, enticement, pull, draw, lure, allurement, temptation, invitation, fascination Definition of crowd-pleaser in US English: crowd-pleasernoun A person or thing with great popular appeal. 受大众欢迎的人(或物) once again, the group has produced an album which is bound to be a crowd-pleaser 这个乐队又一次推出了一张一定会得到大家喜欢的专辑。 Example sentencesExamples - Their wonderfully playful set took in reggae and funk as well as the reliably prickly outbursts of their infectious and catchy crowd-pleasers.
- The evidence suggests that reinventions, in any guises and at whichever end of the scale, are surefire crowd-pleasers.
- The lack of substance in Hollywood crowd-pleasers is constantly decried, harking back to some golden moment in the 1970s or even the 1930s, when films could stimulate the mind as well as satiate the senses.
- Catching only the last few songs from this band was disappointing as they seemed to be a big crowd-pleaser and when the end came there was lots of shouting and clapping for more.
- I've liked both albums they've released, and it was good to hear the crowd-pleasers and so on being performed - but somewhere along the line there's just needs to be some variety.
- He speaks reverently about his fans and their dedication to his music, and he's a genuine crowd-pleaser when it comes to playing the songs they want to hear.
- By their nature, sports movies are crowd-pleasers.
- He moved to Las Vegas and lived there, he moved to Hawaii and lived there; by 1974, he was earning up to $US20,000 a week, belting out crowd-pleasers in his big, big voice.
- I mean, don't tell me that I'm turning into a politician, skipping over the real problems to focus on the flashy, easily remedied crowd-pleasers.
- Football chairmen should rise above being simply crowd-pleasers.
- Drum solos are reliable crowd-pleasers: the audience goes wild; the rest of the band gets a breather.
- He once gave us gorgeously-designed spectacles that not only challenged Hollywood's hegemony over blockbuster crowd-pleasers, but beat Hollywood at its own game by making his blockbusters smarter and more stylish.
- It was a crowd-pleaser, the number one protest song.
- Certainly it's a crowd-pleaser, coming away with the audience prize from several world-class film festivals.
- With dates in Singapore, Taiwan, Indonesia and the Philippines ahead of her this week the songstress insists that she will continue to play the crowd-pleasers despite hating some of the songs.
- There are far more people at their concerts these days; possibly because they avoid most of their own albums, and play some old-time crowd-pleasers.
- The main flaw of this show - designed to be a crowd-pleaser in many ways - is its lack of critical engagement with the photographer's own claims about her work.
- The crowd-pleasers always get the spotlight, while the straight men do their stuff.
- She was a clever theatre programmer who would mix crowd-pleasers with less obvious work and still keep the punters coming.
- So although it was a crowd-pleaser with magnificent tutus, there were heart-stopping moments as young dancers struggled to fully realise difficult choreography.
Synonyms attraction, focus, focal point, enticement, pull, draw, lure, allurement, temptation, invitation, fascination |