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单词 obelisk
释义

Definition of obelisk in English:

obelisk

noun ˈɒb(ə)lɪskˈɑbəˌlɪsk
  • 1A tapering stone pillar, typically having a square or rectangular cross section, set up as a monument or landmark.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • ‘The obelisk is a remarkable landmark, but made even more important because it was one of the first such monuments to be built,’ he said.
    • I walked from the fort site three miles to the stone obelisk marking the place where Captain Fetterman and his men met their end in 1866.
    • Thus, at Treblinka, the memorial to those killed consists of 17,000 granite shards surrounding a large obelisk broken down the middle.
    • Over the past few years, the English archaeologist David Philipson has uncovered a dense underground network of burial chambers and connecting tunnels below them, proof that the obelisks were funeral monuments.
    • More than one-quarter of Australia's civic memorials are obelisks or columns - traditional cemetery forms.
    • The battle site was for many years recorded by a stone obelisk which stood on the bank of the river at Oldbridge but which was blown up in the early years of the 20th century.
    • Jordan arrived at work yesterday to find a stone obelisk in front of the restaurant toppled over.
    • Most of its grandeur - all that street furniture of pillars, obelisks and pyramids - is the work of one man: Joze Plecnik, who studied in Prague.
    • From the orange obelisk monument of Ohakune, to the corrugated iron sheep and dog combo, outlandish structures remind us of the cargo-cult of tourism and a need to be noticed.
    • Living in north Alton as a child, I played in the Confederate cemetery, both tree-shaded and open, green and lovely, with a granite obelisk monument to the dead.
    • All I could see, from a distance, were numerous hands vigorously hurling stones at the aforementioned obelisk.
    • Tall, stone obelisks and stellae exemplify the building skills of the people.
    • Work involved the repair and cleaning of headstones, above-ground chambers, obelisks and monuments together with the construction of boundary walls and ornate railings.
    • For instance, in 1676 the academicians of Aries undertook the reconstruction of a Roman obelisk excavated nearby under the supervision of the academy.
    • The sad truth is that she's barely mentioned in the 3,000 years of effigies and hieroglyphics that cover the towering columns, needle-like obelisks and endless sarcophagi.
    • Finally in 1885 it was replaced by an obelisk known as Flinders' Column.
    • Lengthening shadows cast by giant stone structures, like obelisks or the pillars of Stonehenge, were used by ancient civilizations to measure time.
    • Travelers to Egypt are still impressed with its great pyramids, slender obelisks and avenues of monuments.
    • Porterfield ventures to propose that the obelisk was ‘a monument that advanced the culture and politics of an era, not a regime’.
    • High above a hill in Oakwood Cemetery at Troy, New York, stands a huge obelisk, a monument to the life of Maj.
    Synonyms
    column, pillar, needle, shaft, monolith, monument, memorial
    1. 1.1 A mountain, tree, or other natural object resembling an obelisk in shape.
  • 2

    another term for obelus
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Scholarly notes are usually signalled by superscript numbers at appropriate points in a text, but such symbols as asterisks and obelisks may be used instead for footnotes.

Origin

Mid 16th century: via Latin from Greek obeliskos, diminutive of obelos 'pointed pillar'.

 
 

Definition of obelisk in US English:

obelisk

nounˈäbəˌliskˈɑbəˌlɪsk
  • 1A stone pillar, typically having a square or rectangular cross section and a pyramidal top, set up as a monument or landmark.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Tall, stone obelisks and stellae exemplify the building skills of the people.
    • Living in north Alton as a child, I played in the Confederate cemetery, both tree-shaded and open, green and lovely, with a granite obelisk monument to the dead.
    • The battle site was for many years recorded by a stone obelisk which stood on the bank of the river at Oldbridge but which was blown up in the early years of the 20th century.
    • Work involved the repair and cleaning of headstones, above-ground chambers, obelisks and monuments together with the construction of boundary walls and ornate railings.
    • Jordan arrived at work yesterday to find a stone obelisk in front of the restaurant toppled over.
    • I walked from the fort site three miles to the stone obelisk marking the place where Captain Fetterman and his men met their end in 1866.
    • Over the past few years, the English archaeologist David Philipson has uncovered a dense underground network of burial chambers and connecting tunnels below them, proof that the obelisks were funeral monuments.
    • More than one-quarter of Australia's civic memorials are obelisks or columns - traditional cemetery forms.
    • For instance, in 1676 the academicians of Aries undertook the reconstruction of a Roman obelisk excavated nearby under the supervision of the academy.
    • Thus, at Treblinka, the memorial to those killed consists of 17,000 granite shards surrounding a large obelisk broken down the middle.
    • From the orange obelisk monument of Ohakune, to the corrugated iron sheep and dog combo, outlandish structures remind us of the cargo-cult of tourism and a need to be noticed.
    • Most of its grandeur - all that street furniture of pillars, obelisks and pyramids - is the work of one man: Joze Plecnik, who studied in Prague.
    • Porterfield ventures to propose that the obelisk was ‘a monument that advanced the culture and politics of an era, not a regime’.
    • Travelers to Egypt are still impressed with its great pyramids, slender obelisks and avenues of monuments.
    • ‘The obelisk is a remarkable landmark, but made even more important because it was one of the first such monuments to be built,’ he said.
    • High above a hill in Oakwood Cemetery at Troy, New York, stands a huge obelisk, a monument to the life of Maj.
    • Lengthening shadows cast by giant stone structures, like obelisks or the pillars of Stonehenge, were used by ancient civilizations to measure time.
    • The sad truth is that she's barely mentioned in the 3,000 years of effigies and hieroglyphics that cover the towering columns, needle-like obelisks and endless sarcophagi.
    • Finally in 1885 it was replaced by an obelisk known as Flinders' Column.
    • All I could see, from a distance, were numerous hands vigorously hurling stones at the aforementioned obelisk.
    Synonyms
    column, pillar, needle, shaft, monolith, monument, memorial
    1. 1.1 A mountain, tree, or other natural object shaped like an obelisk.
  • 2

    another term for obelus
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Scholarly notes are usually signalled by superscript numbers at appropriate points in a text, but such symbols as asterisks and obelisks may be used instead for footnotes.

Origin

Mid 16th century: via Latin from Greek obeliskos, diminutive of obelos ‘pointed pillar’.

 
 
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更新时间:2024/9/21 17:54:08