| 释义 | 
		Definition of grande dame in English: grande damenoun ɡrɒ̃d ˈdamˈɡrän ˈdäm A woman holding an influential position within a particular sphere.  the grande dame of British sculpture  Example sentencesExamples -  The Stratford grande dame has heard it all over the course of a career that has included many of the great women's roles in the English repertoire.
 -  The grande dame of tennis plans to play one more year on the circuit in hopes of representing the United States at the 2004 Athens Olympics - one minor hole in her sporting life.
 -  As the grande dame of French film, it's easy to appreciate why Baye was a little disconcerted by the film's title.
 -  And that the most dignified thing we ageing grandes dames can do is smile wryly, surrender and follow the sun.
 -  The grande dame of newspaper columnists was recently complaining that the electorate were behaving like unprincipled, selfish consumers.
 -  My companion is something of a grande dame of the food world and is thus the perfect diner for the Lord Edward.
 -  Okay, so it's true that the grande dame of literary gender politics has calmed down an awful lot since the 1970s.
 -  Even television, the grande dame of conventional mass marketing, is taking steps to offer a more focused advertising experience.
 -  All things considered, with this work, Lessing once again proves that she more than deserves her reputation as the grande dame of literary fiction.
 -  On this recording, made in 1990 (in the presence of the composer), she is something of a grande dame surrounded by three youthful companions.
 -  Eighty next year, with a dozen novels behind her and as much writing again in other forms, Howard is still simmering with ideas and projects, still playing her part as a grande dame of English letters.
 -  Margaret Court, the grande dame of tennis in Australia, agreed: ‘In Alicia we have got somebody who has it all.’
 -  But Hopper, who was the grande dame of gossip columnists at that time, she was constantly castigating us in the press for living in sin.
 -  Someone suggested she might like to reminisce with the other grande dame of the book festival.
 -  She was the grande dame of the American theatre.
 -  And I was pleased to see that Anne Summers, one of the grandes dames of Australian feminism, agrees with me.
 -  On Friday morning of 11 th March, the grande dame of Indonesian cinema, Christine Hakim, sat with graceful poise for this interview.
 -  At seventy-eight, Fox has a new-found and stylishly invigorated fame that gives her grande dame status for a swelling number of devotees who have come to recognize her charm, her wisdom, and her art.
 -  The celebrated grande dame of Hindi letters is very individual, very stylised, very hard to replicate in another language.
 -  Withers, the grande dame of this and previous improv festivals, spoke about improvisation during the post-show reception onstage.
 
 
 Origin   French, literally 'grand lady'.    Definition of grande dame in US English: grande damenounˈɡrän ˈdäm A woman of influential position within a particular sphere.  the grande dame of British sculpture  Example sentencesExamples -  On this recording, made in 1990 (in the presence of the composer), she is something of a grande dame surrounded by three youthful companions.
 -  Margaret Court, the grande dame of tennis in Australia, agreed: ‘In Alicia we have got somebody who has it all.’
 -  Withers, the grande dame of this and previous improv festivals, spoke about improvisation during the post-show reception onstage.
 -  My companion is something of a grande dame of the food world and is thus the perfect diner for the Lord Edward.
 -  Eighty next year, with a dozen novels behind her and as much writing again in other forms, Howard is still simmering with ideas and projects, still playing her part as a grande dame of English letters.
 -  The celebrated grande dame of Hindi letters is very individual, very stylised, very hard to replicate in another language.
 -  The grande dame of tennis plans to play one more year on the circuit in hopes of representing the United States at the 2004 Athens Olympics - one minor hole in her sporting life.
 -  And that the most dignified thing we ageing grandes dames can do is smile wryly, surrender and follow the sun.
 -  She was the grande dame of the American theatre.
 -  The Stratford grande dame has heard it all over the course of a career that has included many of the great women's roles in the English repertoire.
 -  At seventy-eight, Fox has a new-found and stylishly invigorated fame that gives her grande dame status for a swelling number of devotees who have come to recognize her charm, her wisdom, and her art.
 -  The grande dame of newspaper columnists was recently complaining that the electorate were behaving like unprincipled, selfish consumers.
 -  Someone suggested she might like to reminisce with the other grande dame of the book festival.
 -  And I was pleased to see that Anne Summers, one of the grandes dames of Australian feminism, agrees with me.
 -  Even television, the grande dame of conventional mass marketing, is taking steps to offer a more focused advertising experience.
 -  All things considered, with this work, Lessing once again proves that she more than deserves her reputation as the grande dame of literary fiction.
 -  Okay, so it's true that the grande dame of literary gender politics has calmed down an awful lot since the 1970s.
 -  But Hopper, who was the grande dame of gossip columnists at that time, she was constantly castigating us in the press for living in sin.
 -  As the grande dame of French film, it's easy to appreciate why Baye was a little disconcerted by the film's title.
 -  On Friday morning of 11 th March, the grande dame of Indonesian cinema, Christine Hakim, sat with graceful poise for this interview.
 
 
 Origin   French, literally ‘grand lady’.     |