释义 |
View usage for: (ɒntʊrɑːʒ) Word forms: plural entouragescountable noun [usually poss NOUN]A famous or important person's entourage is the group of assistants, servants, or other people who travel with them. Peter the Great shocked London by his wild behaviour and that of his entourage whenhe visited England in 1698. He was accompanied by an entourage of a dozen police officers. Synonyms: retinue, company, following, staff More Synonyms of entourage More Synonyms of entourage entourage in British English (ˈɒntʊˌrɑːʒ, French ɑ̃turaʒ) noun1. a group of attendants or retainers, esp such as surround an important person; retinue 2. surroundings or environment Word origin C19: from French, from entourer to surround, from entour around, from tour circuit; see tour, turnentourage in American English (ˌɑntʊˈrɑʒ; ˈɑntʊˌrɑʒ) noun1. Rare surroundings; environment 2. a group of accompanying attendants, assistants, or associates; retinue Word origin Fr < entourer, to surround < en tour, around < en, in + tour, turn, round + -age Examples of 'entourage' in a sentenceentourage Only his small entourage seemed to be on his side.She has a large and devoted entourage.He had an entourage of nine people and four cars.Having an entourage of people hanging out in the background can make potential interviewees uncomfortable.He also claimed she has such a big entourage that he could not connect with her in a meaningful way.This is small fry compared with other parts of the capital where the entourage surrounding rival teams will be based.There is the big entourage, but he does not stop people getting close.That's almost as big as her entourage.But backstage she was less than friendly, insisting on being surrounded by her entourage.I do have a veritable entourage of people cheering me on.Despite having an unnecessarily big entourage, he was a true pro and knocked out his set in one take.Her small entourage included a little band of aspiring actors, happy to reassure her that she was still a star.There was no big entourage or airs or graces or any of that, he really just wanted to make some music.The singer has also brought a set of crib cards and a large entourage, ready to sell her movie round the world.I don't need a huge entourage and a mountain of luggage.Everyone acts as if I have a huge entourage of staff.He's kept on a tight leash by his small, focused entourage.Generally, the bigger the entourage, the bigger the pain in the bottom.I help keep her organised but sometimes she has a stylist and an entourage of make-up people to do that.If you have a large entourage - the butler and chef will have to stay somewhere - you can add six more bedrooms on the fifth floor.She came with a huge entourage, so we told her security staff to take the night off because she was safe with us in the Tower. In other languagesentourage British English: entourage NOUN A famous or important person's entourage is the group of assistants, servants, or other people who travel with them. The singer was quickly whisked away by her entourage. - American English: entourage
- Brazilian Portuguese: séquito
- Chinese: 随从
- European Spanish: séquito
- French: entourage
- German: Gefolge
- Italian: entourage
- Japanese: 側近
- Korean: 수행원들
- European Portuguese: séquito
- Latin American Spanish: séquito
Definition a group of people who assist or travel with an important or well-known person He was surrounded by an entourage of aides. Additional synonymsDefinition the atmosphere of a place The overall ambience of the room is cosy. Synonyms atmosphere, feel, setting, air, quality, character, spirit, surroundings, tone, mood, impression, flavour, temper, tenor, aura, complexion, vibes (slang), vibrations (slang), milieuDefinition a funeral procession The funeral cortege wound its way through the city. Synonyms procession, train, entourage, cavalcade, retinue, suiteDefinition the residence or retinue of a sovereign tales of King Arthur and his court Synonyms royal household, train, suite, attendants, entourage, retinue, cortege- entity
- entomb
- entombment
- entourage
- entrails
- entrance
- entrant
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