am·phi·the·a·tre
noun/ˈæmfɪθɪətə(r)/
/ˈæmfɪθiːətər/
(US English amphitheater)
- a round building without a roof and with rows of seats that rise in steps around an open space. Amphitheatres were used especially in ancient Greece and Rome for public entertainments.
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(尤指古希腊和古罗马的)圆形露天剧场,圆形露天竞技场 - The Roman amphitheatre stands just outside the fortress walls.
古罗马竞技场就坐落在城墙外。
- The Roman amphitheatre stands just outside the fortress walls.
- a room, hall or theatre with rows of seats that rise in steps
阶梯式座位大厅(或剧场、室) - (specialist) an open space that is surrounded by high sloping land
圆形凹地 - The path emerges from the gorge into an open amphitheatre with slopes all around.
这条小路从峡谷延伸到一个开放的圆形剧场,周围都是斜坡。
- The path emerges from the gorge into an open amphitheatre with slopes all around.
Word Originlate Middle English: via Latin from Greek amphitheatron, from amphi ‘on both sides’ + theatron, from theasthai ‘behold’.