noon
英式音标:[nu:n] 美式音标:[nun]
noon基本解释 n. 中午;正午;全盛期n. (Noon)人名;(朝)嫩;(英、巴基)努恩 noon的意思释义 n.正午,中午;全盛期,顶点;〈古〉午夜;晌午 双语
noon怎么读
英式音标:[nu:n]
美式音标:[nun]
noon基本解释
n. 中午;正午;全盛期
n. (Noon)人名;(朝)嫩;(英、巴基)努恩
noon的意思释义
n.
正午,中午;全盛期,顶点;〈古〉午夜;晌午
双语释义
n.(名词)[U]正午,中午 midday; 12 o\'clock in the daytime
英英释义
noon[ nu:n ]n.the middle of the day
同义词:twelve noonhigh noonmiddaynoondaynoontide
noon用法及例句
词汇搭配
用作名词 (n.)
名词+~
hot summer noon盛夏的中午
介词+~
at noon在中午
little before noon将近中午
from noon to evening从中午到傍晚
from morning till noon从早晨到中午
toward noon临近中午
~+介词
noon of life壮年时期
词组短语
at noon adv. 在中午
high noon正午;全盛时期;顶峰;[口]危机
双语例句
用作名词(n.)
At noon, the sun is high in the sky.
正午,烈日当空。
We need to be there before noon.
我们要在正午前赶到那儿。
She anchors a 45-minute news show at noon.
她每天中午主持四十五分钟的新闻广播。
We were through with the work towards noon.
将近中午时我们把工作做完了。
例句参考
Plasma and Magnetic Field Characteristics of the Distant Polar Cusp near Local Noon: The Entry LayerIMF By dependence of region 1 Birkeland currents near noon
Periodic shearing motions in the Jovian magnetosphere causing a localized peak in the main auroral emission close to noon
Generation of Multi-mode NOON States with Arbitrary N
Noon at Ngayon: Then & Now
Waiting for Noon
Advances in Molecular & Cellular Pathology Noon Seminar Series Margaret Cameron Spain Auditorium Fall 2009 Schedule
Keppel, SembMarine fall 3% by noon in wake of Keppel O&M\'s corruption fines
Band gap fluorescence from individual single-walled carbon nanotubes
A gentle introduction to quantile regression for ecologists
noon词源
noon
noon: [OE] Noon denotes etymologically the ‘ninth’ hour. It was adopted in the Old English period from Latin nōna, short for nōna hōra, the ‘ninth hour’. Reckoning the day from sunrise, on average six o’clock, this meant that ‘noon’ was three o’clock in the afternoon (which was originally when the office of nones [18] – a related word – was said in the Roman catholic church).By the 12th century, however, we find noon being used for a ‘midday meal’, and in the early 13th century it had moved on to simply ‘midday’, so it appears that some forward shifting of a meal that had originally taken place in mid afternoon was responsible for altering the meaning of noon (modern English terms for mealtimes, such as tea and dinner, are equally slippery).=> nine
noon (n.)
mid-12c., non \"midday, 12 o\'clock p.m., midday meal,\" from Old English non \"3 o\'clock p.m., the ninth hour,\" also \"the canonical hour of nones,\" from Latin nona hora \"ninth hour\" of daylight, by Roman reckoning about 3 p.m., from nona, fem. singular of nonus \"ninth\" (see nones). Sense shift from \"3 p.m.\" to \"12 p.m.\" began during 12c., when time of Church prayers shifted from ninth hour to sixth hour, or perhaps because the customary time of the midday meal shifted, or both. The shift was complete by 14c. (same evolution in Dutch noen).