| 释义 | 
		Definition of golden age in English: golden agenoun 1An idyllic, often imaginary past time of peace, prosperity, and happiness.  he hankered after a lost golden age  Example sentencesExamples -  Most of the rest of the media seemed to join in, yearning for a lost golden age.
 -  Now, the golden age of Cordoba is evoked as a symbol of the harmony that might be possible in the future.
 -  They looked back longingly to a mythical golden age in a medieval past.
 -  Of course Cracow was our medieval historical capital and it symbolised to us the golden age of Polish history.
 -  Arthur legends have an apocalyptic tone to them: once upon a time, there was a golden age, now lost.
 -  Are these events recorded to tantalise us with a past golden age in which we can have no part?
 -  But the evidence proves the Mesolithic was hardly a golden age of peace and universal goodwill between people.
 -  But I'd like a report twenty years or so from now, when you may well look back on this time as a golden age.
 -  In order for society to advance, the theory went, it needed to go back to some golden age in the past.
 -  It is an imperialist movement, yearning for an imagined golden age which it hopes to recreate.
 -  In the south there was often a hankering for a past golden age on the reserves, with a rich communal life, some farming and a blended culture.
 -  The truth is that the golden age isn't exactly imaginary.
 -  They hate the dynamism and boundless optimism of its people while they are static and look backward to an imagined golden age.
 -  But the good stuff survives and most of the lousy and mediocre stuff disappears, and people remember golden ages that never were.
 -  However, like all golden ages, the Danish one was something of an illusion, as the title of this book implies.
 -  Elsewhere, the empire is generally considered to have been enjoying a golden age of tranquillity and prosperity.
 -  Critics could rightly charge that the report had waxed nostalgic about an imaginary golden age.
 -  The golden age was a constant springtime of pleasure, peace, and contentment.
 -  The citizens imagine an ideal golden age without the need for labour.
 -  It's a glimpse into the golden age of kings, a lost world of luxury, political scheming, extravagance and hedonism.
 
 - 1.1 The period when a specified art or activity is at its peak.
 Example sentencesExamples -  The senior band of 35 plays a wide range of music from the golden age of swing to more up tempo and funky numbers.
 -  So many greats in an era that we now know was the last golden age of heavyweight boxing, an era over which he reigned supreme.
 -  The golden age of building in Shanghai was the period between the two world wars.
 -  History has already anointed the 1970s as the last golden age of American cinema.
 -  It celebrates not only Christmas but the artistic and commercial peak of the golden age of popular song writing.
 -  The 19th century was a golden age for wine writing in Britain.
 -  Indeed, the past eight years may come to be regarded as something of a golden age of American democracy.
 -  The 17th and 18th centuries saw a golden age of frame-making develop in France.
 -  Yet this big screen resurgence cannot compare to the original golden age.
 -  The past thirty years have been a golden age for the study of cognitive development.
 -  Opening the new season on January 27 is That'll be the Day, a riotous romp through the golden age of rock 'n' roll.
 -  Julius says the next 100 years are going to be a glorious golden age of maths, of science.
 -  She is like a screen siren from the golden age of cinema - composed, elegant and glamorous.
 -  Research has shown that knowledge of this art had its golden age at some remote period in the past.
 -  It's an homage to both the history of the building and the golden age of cinema.
 -  Commentators always assume there was a golden age of cinema that must have passed them by.
 -  Comedy is supposedly enjoying a national golden age at the moment.
 -  That leaves grunge, which is indeed emerging as a golden age of rock, perhaps the genre's last hurrah.
 -  It is clearly a handsome design from an era some proclaim to be the technical golden age of Scottish housebuilding.
 -  Everyone accepts that the 1970s were a golden age for American cinema.
 
  
 
 Origin   Mid 16th century: the Greek and Roman poets' name for the first period of history, when the human race lived in an ideal state.    Definition of golden age in US English: golden agenounˈɡōldən ājˈɡoʊldən eɪdʒ 1An idyllic, often imaginary past time of peace, prosperity, and happiness.  Example sentencesExamples -  Of course Cracow was our medieval historical capital and it symbolised to us the golden age of Polish history.
 -  They hate the dynamism and boundless optimism of its people while they are static and look backward to an imagined golden age.
 -  However, like all golden ages, the Danish one was something of an illusion, as the title of this book implies.
 -  Are these events recorded to tantalise us with a past golden age in which we can have no part?
 -  The truth is that the golden age isn't exactly imaginary.
 -  Arthur legends have an apocalyptic tone to them: once upon a time, there was a golden age, now lost.
 -  Most of the rest of the media seemed to join in, yearning for a lost golden age.
 -  Now, the golden age of Cordoba is evoked as a symbol of the harmony that might be possible in the future.
 -  It is an imperialist movement, yearning for an imagined golden age which it hopes to recreate.
 -  Critics could rightly charge that the report had waxed nostalgic about an imaginary golden age.
 -  The citizens imagine an ideal golden age without the need for labour.
 -  But I'd like a report twenty years or so from now, when you may well look back on this time as a golden age.
 -  It's a glimpse into the golden age of kings, a lost world of luxury, political scheming, extravagance and hedonism.
 -  Elsewhere, the empire is generally considered to have been enjoying a golden age of tranquillity and prosperity.
 -  But the good stuff survives and most of the lousy and mediocre stuff disappears, and people remember golden ages that never were.
 -  In the south there was often a hankering for a past golden age on the reserves, with a rich communal life, some farming and a blended culture.
 -  They looked back longingly to a mythical golden age in a medieval past.
 -  In order for society to advance, the theory went, it needed to go back to some golden age in the past.
 -  The golden age was a constant springtime of pleasure, peace, and contentment.
 -  But the evidence proves the Mesolithic was hardly a golden age of peace and universal goodwill between people.
 
 - 1.1 The period when a specified art, skill, or activity is at its peak.
 Example sentencesExamples -  It is clearly a handsome design from an era some proclaim to be the technical golden age of Scottish housebuilding.
 -  History has already anointed the 1970s as the last golden age of American cinema.
 -  She is like a screen siren from the golden age of cinema - composed, elegant and glamorous.
 -  The senior band of 35 plays a wide range of music from the golden age of swing to more up tempo and funky numbers.
 -  That leaves grunge, which is indeed emerging as a golden age of rock, perhaps the genre's last hurrah.
 -  The 19th century was a golden age for wine writing in Britain.
 -  Indeed, the past eight years may come to be regarded as something of a golden age of American democracy.
 -  The 17th and 18th centuries saw a golden age of frame-making develop in France.
 -  Opening the new season on January 27 is That'll be the Day, a riotous romp through the golden age of rock 'n' roll.
 -  It's an homage to both the history of the building and the golden age of cinema.
 -  So many greats in an era that we now know was the last golden age of heavyweight boxing, an era over which he reigned supreme.
 -  Research has shown that knowledge of this art had its golden age at some remote period in the past.
 -  It celebrates not only Christmas but the artistic and commercial peak of the golden age of popular song writing.
 -  Yet this big screen resurgence cannot compare to the original golden age.
 -  Commentators always assume there was a golden age of cinema that must have passed them by.
 -  The golden age of building in Shanghai was the period between the two world wars.
 -  The past thirty years have been a golden age for the study of cognitive development.
 -  Everyone accepts that the 1970s were a golden age for American cinema.
 -  Julius says the next 100 years are going to be a glorious golden age of maths, of science.
 -  Comedy is supposedly enjoying a national golden age at the moment.
 
  
 
 Origin   Mid 16th century: the Greek and Roman poets' name for the first period of history, when the human race lived in an ideal state.     |