释义 |
eone‧on /ˈiːən/ noun [countable] eonOrigin: 1600-1700 Latin, Greek aion ‘age’ - Before they had met, both aged six, Finch seemed to have lived alone for eons.
- But there was a sombre shadow of familiarity to it and after subjective eons of frustration, intuition struck her.
- Look under, look at the bottom of the list of eon.
- Mind or intelligence had not been involved; those eons were empty of all that touched the emotions.
- Moreover, some of these polymorphisms are astonishingly ancient; they have persisted for geological eons.
- The ice destroyed the drainage pattern of eons.
- Tourism, one can safely say, is at least an eon away.
- Well at the, at the end of the list of words that we translate eon for example.
another spelling of aeon |