释义 |
full moon in British Englishnoun1. one of the four phases of the moon, occurring when the earth lies between the sun and the moon so that the moon is visible as a fully illuminated disc 2. the moon in this phase 3. the time at which this occurs full moon in American English 1. the phase of the moon when it is on the side of the earth away from the sun, with its entire face reflecting sunlight to the earth 2. the time of month when such a moon is seen Examples of 'full moon' in a sentencefull moon There are also supposed to be more births around the time of a full moon.The term refers to when two full moons occur in one calendar month.Instead of one full moon per year in your sign, you get two.In fact, the difference in brightness from one full moon to another is barely noticeable.By early December, it could be brighter than the full moon and visible in daylight.Like the tides, they are affected by the lunar cycles, expanding their range of influence at the time of the full moon. In other languagesfull moon British English: full moon / fʊl muːn/ NOUN You use full moon to describe one of the four phases of the moon, occurring when the earth lies between the sun and the moon so that the moon is visible as a fully illuminated disc. It was a lovely night with a full moon. - American English: full moon
- Arabic: بَدْر
- Brazilian Portuguese: lua cheia
- Chinese: 满月
- Croatian: pun mjesec
- Czech: úplněk
- Danish: fuldmåne
- Dutch: volle maan
- European Spanish: luna llena
- Finnish: täysikuu
- French: pleine lune
- German: Vollmond
- Greek: πανσέληνος
- Italian: luna piena
- Japanese: 満月
- Korean: 보름달
- Norwegian: fullmåne
- Polish: pełnia księżyca
- European Portuguese: lua cheia
- Romanian: lună plină
- Russian: полнолуние
- Latin American Spanish: luna llena
- Swedish: fullmåne
- Thai: พระจันทร์เต็มดวง
- Turkish: dolunay
- Ukrainian: повний місяць
- Vietnamese: trăng tròn
Chinese translation of 'full moon' |