释义 |
annalsan‧nals /ˈænlz/ noun [plural] annalsOrigin: 1500-1600 Latin annales, from annalis; ➔ ANNUAL1 - the Annals of Internal Medicine
- Consider one example from the annals of air pollution: the effort to reduce the effects of car exhaust on the atmosphere.
- He left few marks in the annals of economic discipline.
- Rarely in the annals of human history has any people committed so much of its treasure to such a noble cause.
- The annals also recorded a war between the Romans and the Saxons.
- The annals of the police courts, and headlines in the newspapers, tell a rather different story.
- Wharton's autobiography ranks high in the annals of psychopathology.
- Yet it remains one of the most fondly remembered lines in the annals of Advertising.
► in the annals of something- No one can compete with Tiepolo in the annals of European painting for his mythological heroes.
- Fact, in this instance, is far stranger and more profoundly disquieting than anything in the annals of fiction.
- His theory, published in the Annals of Internal Medicine last June, prompted lots of critics to write in.
- I wondered how our love would be marked in the annals of the universe.
- If the budget is actually balanced because of Clinton, his comparative stature in the annals of history will grow only modestly.
- In all this, including the boredom, there is nothing new in the annals of adolescence.
- Rarely in the annals of human history has any people committed so much of its treasure to such a noble cause.
- Whoever invented the golf cart deserves an honored place in the annals of sport.
- Yet it remains one of the most fondly remembered lines in the annals of Advertising.
1in the annals of something in the whole history of something: one of the most unusual cases in the annals of crime2used in the titles of official records of events or activities: the Annals of the Zoological Society |