释义 |
Definition of heyday in English: heydaynounˈheɪdeɪˈheɪˌdeɪ usually one's heydayThe period of a person's or thing's greatest success, popularity, activity, or vigour. the paper has lost millions of readers since its heyday in 1964 Example sentencesExamples - In its heyday, only 30 years ago, just under 1,000 trawlers operated from the port.
- In its heyday, MTV would sometimes air the same episode as many as ten times per week.
- In his heyday he was also an excellent marksman and didn't need much help from the dogs when it came to finding birds.
- You have to go back 10 years, to the heyday of Radio 1, to find a station with a bigger audience.
- In its heyday the Barnbow factory in Leeds was crucial to the Allied war effort during the First World War.
- In its heyday it was selling 700,000 cases a year, but that figure has now halved amid declining sales.
- Over three million people walked through its door every year in its heyday before the war.
- In Fangio's heyday in the early years of the championship, survival was as notable as performance.
- In appearance he was a cross between a youthful James Stewart and Peter O'Toole in his Lawrence of Arabia heyday.
- It was a salutary lesson for the woman who, in her heyday, had spent 209 weeks as the world No.1.
- The picture quality ranges from sharp and clear interview footage shot recently to soft and grainy footage from the band's heyday.
- But despite yesterday's good news, the heyday of mining in Yorkshire has well and truly passed.
- A local hero in his heyday, he ended his life alone, shutting himself away after being diagnosed with cancer.
- In its heyday, it was one of the best motor dealers in all of county Sligo.
- I understand the feelings of loss among those who have fond memories of the Odeon in its heyday of the Thirties and Forties.
- Each track sounds like it comes from Motown Records in its '70s heyday.
- Water mills have been in existence in Britain for more than 1,000 years. They had their heyday during the Industrial Revolution, when the textile industries in the Midlands relied on this form of power.
- To me, it's a good reminder what Blackburn was, with heavy industry that employed tens of thousands in its heyday.
- In its heyday, the Falcon GT was reckoned to be the fastest four-door sedan in the world.
- In their heyday, before the Second World War, there were more than 80,000 geisha in Japan.
Synonyms prime, peak, height, high point, high spot, peak of perfection, pinnacle, acme, zenith, day, time, bloom, flowering, culmination, crowning point prime of life, best days, best years, salad days
Origin Late 16th century (denoting good spirits or passion): from archaic heyday!, an exclamation of joy, surprise, etc.. From the early 16th century people shouted hey-day! to express joy, surprise, or some other intense emotion. It may have come from Low German heida! or heidi!, ‘hurrah!’. By the end of the same century heyday meant ‘a state of high spirits or passion’. Perhaps through a false association with day, it began to refer to the period of a person's or thing's greatest success or activity in the mid 18th century.
Definition of heyday in US English: heydaynounˈheɪˌdeɪˈhāˌdā usually one's heydayThe period of a person's or thing's greatest success, popularity, or vigor. the paper has lost millions of readers since its heyday in 1964 Example sentencesExamples - But despite yesterday's good news, the heyday of mining in Yorkshire has well and truly passed.
- In its heyday, MTV would sometimes air the same episode as many as ten times per week.
- In Fangio's heyday in the early years of the championship, survival was as notable as performance.
- The picture quality ranges from sharp and clear interview footage shot recently to soft and grainy footage from the band's heyday.
- Water mills have been in existence in Britain for more than 1,000 years. They had their heyday during the Industrial Revolution, when the textile industries in the Midlands relied on this form of power.
- In its heyday, only 30 years ago, just under 1,000 trawlers operated from the port.
- Over three million people walked through its door every year in its heyday before the war.
- In its heyday the Barnbow factory in Leeds was crucial to the Allied war effort during the First World War.
- Each track sounds like it comes from Motown Records in its '70s heyday.
- In his heyday he was also an excellent marksman and didn't need much help from the dogs when it came to finding birds.
- A local hero in his heyday, he ended his life alone, shutting himself away after being diagnosed with cancer.
- In its heyday, it was one of the best motor dealers in all of county Sligo.
- In its heyday, the Falcon GT was reckoned to be the fastest four-door sedan in the world.
- You have to go back 10 years, to the heyday of Radio 1, to find a station with a bigger audience.
- In appearance he was a cross between a youthful James Stewart and Peter O'Toole in his Lawrence of Arabia heyday.
- To me, it's a good reminder what Blackburn was, with heavy industry that employed tens of thousands in its heyday.
- In their heyday, before the Second World War, there were more than 80,000 geisha in Japan.
- In its heyday it was selling 700,000 cases a year, but that figure has now halved amid declining sales.
- I understand the feelings of loss among those who have fond memories of the Odeon in its heyday of the Thirties and Forties.
- It was a salutary lesson for the woman who, in her heyday, had spent 209 weeks as the world No.1.
Synonyms prime, peak, height, high point, high spot, peak of perfection, pinnacle, acme, zenith, day, time, bloom, flowering, culmination, crowning point
Origin Late 16th century (denoting good spirits or passion): from archaic heyday!, an exclamation of joy, surprise, etc.. |