深度学习
cicerone (SIS eh RONE ee or CHI che RONE eh) We’ve borrowed this word that means “guide for sightseers” straight from the Italian. It originally refers to Marcus Tullius Cicero (106–43 BC), the famous Roman orator, statesman, and philosopher. You’re more likely to see it in literature than hear it commonly used today.
- It will be terrific to have Julie as our cicerone when David and I visit Florence in April since she’s lived there for two years and really knows her way around the city.
- It is impossible to visit the famous temples of Ankgor Wat in Cambodia without a cicerone as the ruins need to be protected from plundering by thieves and vandals.
——摘自《Fiske WordPower: The Most Effective System for Building a Vocabulary That Gets Results Fast》
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cicerone(SIS eh RONE ee或CHI che RONE eh)我们直接从意大利语中借用了这个词,意思是“游客指南”。它最初指的是著名的罗马演说家、政治家和哲学家Marcus Tullius Cicero(公元前106–43年)。你更可能在文学作品中看到它,而不是今天常用的它。
- 当大卫和我四月份访问佛罗伦萨时,有朱莉作为我们的导游将是一件很棒的事,因为她在那里住了两年,真的很了解这座城市
- 如果没有导游,参观柬埔寨著名的安戈尔寺是不可能的,因为废墟需要保护,以免被小偷和破坏者掠夺
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