释义 |
Definition of star-struck in English: star-struckadjective Fascinated or greatly impressed by famous people, especially those connected with the cinema or the theatre. I was a star-struck cinemagoer Example sentencesExamples - But eight-year-old Panny Frost is becoming a showgirl for the second time in her star-struck childhood.
- I was a bit star-struck as an impressionable 11-year old kid.
- Bette Davis plays Margo Channing, a great Broadway actress who takes a star-struck Eve Harrington under her wing.
- It's all love, of course - Shaun's game is real enough that these kids might be expected to approach him with a sense of awe, but they know him too well to be star-struck.
- In star-struck Los Angeles a different strategy was required, and he accordingly engaged Placido Domingo as the company's artistic advisor
- Church minister Gary Roberts was adamant that extra security would be drafted in to ensure reporters, photographers and star-struck fans would not attend the service as an excuse to get a glimpse of the preparations.
- And since films have room only for a handful of stars but can accommodate a whole lot of extras, cinema was a very limited avenue for the star-struck.
- It could also provide the chance of a lifetime for star-struck youngsters who dream of following in the footsteps of Daniel Radcliffe, Rupert Grint and Emma Watson, the child stars of the Harry Potter films.
- It was strange how I didn't feel any guilt about flirting with the star-struck teenagers, and in fact I was having fun.
- He helped attract star-struck recruits, but with millions in the bank, he had no interest in devoting the required hours to recruiting, coaching and selling the program.
- Our fame fixations are actually making people sick, with ‘celebrity worship syndrome’ now a recognised symptom of the star-struck society.
- One reason The Motorcycle Diaries is such a joy to watch is that it's not star-struck about its famous subject.
- The macho heart-throb, Prithviraj, was heard handing out some sober advice to a group of star-struck college girls during a television programme the other day.
- Danielle Mason provides the perfect foil as the star-struck, ambitious Lisa and has, I think, the harder job since her character undergoes more development and change.
- Elaine said that she had been star-struck when meeting actress Zoe Lucker, who comes from Huddersfield, and plays her boss Tanya.
- When Mikhail Baryshnikov performed in London recently, the ecstatic screams from star-struck audience members only served to highlight how few current dancers can provoke that kind of reaction.
- Hundreds of star-struck wannabes will line up outside the Hawk's Well Theatre on Saturday, September 25, for the north-west heats of You're A Star.
- Evans is completely miscast as the bumbling Interpol agent, while Forlani appears star-struck most of the time, which gets in the way of any type of performance.
- The event inspired Bollywood actress Suhasini Mulay to share her experience of cinema when she was just a young star-struck fan.
- Yet unlike so many star-struck kids, Kylie had the connections to make her daydreams happen.
Definition of star-struck in US English: star-struckadjectiveˈstär ˌstrəkˈstɑr ˌstrək Fascinated or greatly impressed by famous people, especially those connected with the entertainment industry. I was a star-struck teenager Example sentencesExamples - Our fame fixations are actually making people sick, with ‘celebrity worship syndrome’ now a recognised symptom of the star-struck society.
- Yet unlike so many star-struck kids, Kylie had the connections to make her daydreams happen.
- Elaine said that she had been star-struck when meeting actress Zoe Lucker, who comes from Huddersfield, and plays her boss Tanya.
- I was a bit star-struck as an impressionable 11-year old kid.
- Hundreds of star-struck wannabes will line up outside the Hawk's Well Theatre on Saturday, September 25, for the north-west heats of You're A Star.
- Danielle Mason provides the perfect foil as the star-struck, ambitious Lisa and has, I think, the harder job since her character undergoes more development and change.
- The event inspired Bollywood actress Suhasini Mulay to share her experience of cinema when she was just a young star-struck fan.
- Evans is completely miscast as the bumbling Interpol agent, while Forlani appears star-struck most of the time, which gets in the way of any type of performance.
- But eight-year-old Panny Frost is becoming a showgirl for the second time in her star-struck childhood.
- In star-struck Los Angeles a different strategy was required, and he accordingly engaged Placido Domingo as the company's artistic advisor
- And since films have room only for a handful of stars but can accommodate a whole lot of extras, cinema was a very limited avenue for the star-struck.
- It was strange how I didn't feel any guilt about flirting with the star-struck teenagers, and in fact I was having fun.
- It could also provide the chance of a lifetime for star-struck youngsters who dream of following in the footsteps of Daniel Radcliffe, Rupert Grint and Emma Watson, the child stars of the Harry Potter films.
- The macho heart-throb, Prithviraj, was heard handing out some sober advice to a group of star-struck college girls during a television programme the other day.
- When Mikhail Baryshnikov performed in London recently, the ecstatic screams from star-struck audience members only served to highlight how few current dancers can provoke that kind of reaction.
- It's all love, of course - Shaun's game is real enough that these kids might be expected to approach him with a sense of awe, but they know him too well to be star-struck.
- Church minister Gary Roberts was adamant that extra security would be drafted in to ensure reporters, photographers and star-struck fans would not attend the service as an excuse to get a glimpse of the preparations.
- Bette Davis plays Margo Channing, a great Broadway actress who takes a star-struck Eve Harrington under her wing.
- One reason The Motorcycle Diaries is such a joy to watch is that it's not star-struck about its famous subject.
- He helped attract star-struck recruits, but with millions in the bank, he had no interest in devoting the required hours to recruiting, coaching and selling the program.
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