| 释义 | 
		halcyonhal‧cy‧on /ˈhælsiən/ adjective    halcyonOrigin: 1500-1600 halcyon  ‘bird believed to bring good weather at sea’ (14-19 centuries), from Latin, from Greek alkyon  ‘kingfisher’  - For a time the halcyon days of 1825 returned.
 
   ► halcyon days- But the halcyon days were short-lived.
 - For a time the halcyon days of 1825 returned.
 - He wrote and thanked the Lord Treasurer for restoring his halcyon days, showing his love for Halling.
 - Hot, halcyon days of sunshine and vapour trails, butterflies and crammed picnic baskets.
 - It was from those halcyon days that the following story dates.
 - The post-merger period amounted to halcyon days for Hook Harris.
 - Who, in its halcyon days, imagined Carthage a ballroom for the wind?
 - You're in a dreary barn of a place, its halcyon days long gone.
 
    halcyon days literary a time in the past when you were very happy  |