释义 |
SlavicSlav‧ic /ˈslɑːvɪk $ ˈslɑː-, ˈslæ-/ (also Slavonic) adjective SlavicOrigin: 1800-1900 Slav ‘Slavic person’ (14-21 centuries), from Medieval Latin Sclavus, from Late Greek, from Sklabenoi ‘Slavs’, from a Slavic language - Almost a century later Manaus's neglected cultural life is re-emerging with a Slavic twist.
- He stands at the very threshold of the age of electrical power-the Slavic genius who made it possible.
- I call it Slavic just because the Slavs were there first.
- It was a community of about 5, 000 people who enjoyed a rare Slavic culture.
- Once, in the seventies, I used to dine in Slavic splendor at places like the Golden Shell.
- Outside, the streets are nearly deserted, the Slavic moon's face nearly full.
- Pity that this convoluted attitude towards violence doesn't prevail in all Slavic societies today.
- With Slavic delight in swerving to extremes, many an artist initially turned to abstraction.
relating to the Slavs or their languages |