释义 |
modern languageˌmodern ˈlanguage noun [countable] - And the importance of modern language teaching will be very much greater.
- Descriptive Neither historical nor comparative grammar is a likely foundation for a modern language method.
- Our modern language and our modern writing have grown out of the language and literature of the past.
- Students combining Latin with a modern language usually spend their third year studying Latin at a university in the appropriate country.
- The now voluminous literature on modernism and postmodernism has been dominated by philosophers and modern language theorists and historians of architecture.
- This word, which was originally borrowed from a Celtic language, has been lost in the modern language.
► Languagesaccented, adjectiveAfrikaans, nounAnglo-Saxon, nounArabic, nounBengali, nounbilingual, adjectiveCantonese, nounChinese, nounconversant, adjectivecreole, nounDanish, noundialect, noundictation, noundirect method, noundub, verbDutch, nounEnglish, nounEsperanto, nounFarsi, nounFlemish, nounfluent, adjectiveFrancophone, adjectiveFranglais, nounFrench, adjectiveGaelic, nounGerman, nounGermanic, adjectiveGreek, nounHebraic, adjectiveHebrew, nounHindi, nounIndo-European, adjectiveItalian, nounItalo-, prefixJapanese, nounLatin, nounLatin, adjectivelinguist, nounlinguistics, nounMandarin, nounMaori, nounmodern language, nounmonolingual, adjectivemother tongue, nounmultilingual, adjectivenative speaker, nounoral, nounpatois, nounPersian, nounPolish, adjectivePortuguese, nounRomance language, nounRomany, nounRussian, nounSanskrit, nounsecond language, nounSemitic, adjectivesign, nounsign, verbsign language, nounSinhalese, nounSpanish, nounspeak, verb-speak, suffixspeaker, nounSwedish, nountransliterate, verbTurkish, nounUrdu, nounusage, nounvernacular, nounvocabulary, nounWelsh, noun British English a language which is used now, especially a European language such as French or Italian, studied as a subject at school or university: a degree in modern languages |