释义 |
[ thur-tee-wuhn ] / ˈθɜr tiˈwʌn /
nouna cardinal number, 30 plus 1. a symbol for this number, as 31 or XXXI. a set of this many persons or things. adjectiveamounting to 31 in number. Words nearby thirty-onethirty-four, thirty-fourth, thirty-nine, Thirty-nine Articles, thirty-ninth, thirty-one, thirty pieces of silver, thirty-second, thirty-second note, thirty-second rest, thirty-seven Dictionary.com UnabridgedBased on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2020 Example sentences from the Web for thirty-oneIf you have a Balance Board and download the game before January 31, Wii Fit U is free for thirty-one days. Can I Lose Weight Playing Video Games?|Alec Kubas-Meyer|January 14, 2014|DAILY BEAST Thirty-one other states accepted the money; Louisiana was the first to turn it down. A History of Grambling University Football: The First Shot in Player Liberation|Allen Barra|November 9, 2013|DAILY BEAST “Thirty-one percent of all homes sold in December were on the market for less than a month,” NAR reported. Housing’s Back—and That’s Bad News|Daniel Gross|January 23, 2013|DAILY BEAST Thirty-one percent say being unemployed for more than a year. Here’s Why We Can’t Get Jobs|Alex Klein|September 18, 2012|DAILY BEAST
Thirty-one percent of recruiters say that if your skills are “no longer in demand,” you may be screwed. Here’s Why We Can’t Get Jobs|Alex Klein|September 18, 2012|DAILY BEAST Of the thirty-one members of the orchestra some had already attained fame, and others achieved it in after years. Beethoven|George Alexander Fischer This Witness was thirty-one years old when he beheld the plates, having been born on the 18th of January, 1798. New Witnesses for God (Volume 2 of 3)|B. H. Roberts The present population of Caen amounts to about thirty-one thousand individuals. Account of a Tour in Normandy, Vol. II. (of 2)|Dawson Turner Gordon had purchased the farm for thirty-one hundred dollars. Mountain Blood|Joseph Hergesheimer Thirty-one officers and 251 men had been killed and wounded out of a fighting force that had on no occasion exceeded 1200 men. The Story of the Malakand Field Force|Sir Winston S. Churchill
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