请输入您要查询的英文单词:

 

单词 Caribbean
释义

Definition of Caribbean in English:

Caribbean

noun ˌkarɪˈbiːənkəˈrɪbɪən
the Caribbean
  • The region consisting of the Caribbean Sea, its islands (including the West Indies), and the surrounding coasts.

adjective ˌkarɪˈbiːənkəˈrɪbɪən
  • Relating to the Caribbean.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The highlight of the tour was a rare Test match experience for the Caribbean girls.
    • This year's music includes sounds of the Caribbean, New Orleans calypso and funk.
    • I was brought up by my grandparents, which is quite normal in Caribbean families.
    • He talked of the desire of the Caribbean countries to reduce their debt and get to a state where everyone has a job.
    • But above all it is the air links that have made the difference to the gourmet Caribbean.
    • The relaxing Caribbean holidays are replaced by exhausting weekends at a Center Parc.
    • There will be a flight back to the UK to add, but what does a Caribbean package holiday cost these days.
    • If the bids were rigged, then other countries could get redress in a Caribbean court.
    • I was on the phone to a Caribbean travel company, hassled, trying to get myself organised.
    • Dermot, by immense skill and persistence, has made this the supreme Caribbean hotel.
    • We were driving through a green tunnel of coconut palms on St. Lucia's Caribbean coast.
    • Scuba diving adds an excellent extra facet to the sun, sea and sand of a standard Caribbean visit.
    • He found it in an unlikely location, the Caribbean island nation of Trinidad and Tobago.
    • Unlike many Caribbean islands, it has no backpackers' beach huts or village B&Bs.
    • Canada, Mexico, and most of the Caribbean states have never required a passport.
    • For Caribbean music lovers, this May could be both the best and the worst of months.
    • Thirteen Bradford head teachers are jetting off to the Caribbean isle of Barbados next week.
    • The visit follows a tour by a group of Wiltshire teachers who visited the Caribbean island in October.
    • In fact, Jamaica has a stronger romantic hold than almost any other Caribbean island.
    • Whatever he's busy with, the Caribbean sun will always break through in the end.

Usage

There are two possible pronunciations of the word Caribbean. The first, more common in British English, puts the stress on the -be-, while the second, found in the US and the Caribbean itself, stresses the -rib-

Rhymes

Actaeon, Aegean, aeon (US eon), Augean, Behan, Cadmean, Carolean, Chaldean, Cyclopean, empyrean, epicurean, European, Fijian, Galilean, Hasmonean, Hebridean, Herculean, Ian, Jacobean, Kampuchean, Laodicean, lien, Linnaean (US Linnean), Maccabean, Mandaean (US Mandean), Medicean, monogenean, Nabataean (US Nabatean), Orphean, paean, paeon, pean, peon, Periclean, piscean, plebeian, Pyrenean, Pythagorean, Sabaean, Sadducean, Sisyphean, skean, Tanzanian, Tennesseean, Terpsichorean, theodicean, Tyrolean
 
 

Definition of Caribbean in US English:

Caribbean

noun
the Caribbean
  • The region consisting of the Caribbean Sea, its islands (including the West Indies), and the surrounding coasts.

adjective
  • Relating to the Caribbean.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • In fact, Jamaica has a stronger romantic hold than almost any other Caribbean island.
    • He talked of the desire of the Caribbean countries to reduce their debt and get to a state where everyone has a job.
    • The relaxing Caribbean holidays are replaced by exhausting weekends at a Center Parc.
    • For Caribbean music lovers, this May could be both the best and the worst of months.
    • We were driving through a green tunnel of coconut palms on St. Lucia's Caribbean coast.
    • The visit follows a tour by a group of Wiltshire teachers who visited the Caribbean island in October.
    • Scuba diving adds an excellent extra facet to the sun, sea and sand of a standard Caribbean visit.
    • Unlike many Caribbean islands, it has no backpackers' beach huts or village B&Bs.
    • This year's music includes sounds of the Caribbean, New Orleans calypso and funk.
    • I was on the phone to a Caribbean travel company, hassled, trying to get myself organised.
    • Dermot, by immense skill and persistence, has made this the supreme Caribbean hotel.
    • Whatever he's busy with, the Caribbean sun will always break through in the end.
    • There will be a flight back to the UK to add, but what does a Caribbean package holiday cost these days.
    • If the bids were rigged, then other countries could get redress in a Caribbean court.
    • The highlight of the tour was a rare Test match experience for the Caribbean girls.
    • Thirteen Bradford head teachers are jetting off to the Caribbean isle of Barbados next week.
    • Canada, Mexico, and most of the Caribbean states have never required a passport.
    • But above all it is the air links that have made the difference to the gourmet Caribbean.
    • I was brought up by my grandparents, which is quite normal in Caribbean families.
    • He found it in an unlikely location, the Caribbean island nation of Trinidad and Tobago.

Usage

There are two possible pronunciations of the word Caribbean, and both are used widely and acceptably in the US. In the Caribbean itself, the preferred pronunciation puts the stress on the -rib-. In Britain, speakers more often put the stress on the -be-, although in recent years, the other pronunciation has gained ground in Britain as the more ‘up-to-date’ and, to some, the more ‘correct’ pronunciation
 
 
随便看

 

英语词典包含464360条英英释义在线翻译词条,基本涵盖了全部常用单词的英英翻译及用法,是英语学习的有利工具。

 

Copyright © 2004-2022 Newdu.com All Rights Reserved
更新时间:2024/9/22 12:39:02