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单词 peninsula
释义

Definition of peninsula in English:

peninsula

noun pɪˈnɪnsjʊləpəˈnɪnsələ
  • A piece of land almost surrounded by water or projecting out into a body of water.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The best visible and typical features are selected as landmarks: heights; visible road stretches; recognizable outlines of lakes, islands and peninsulas.
    • But there are myriads of other discrete territories, such as deserts, mountain ranges, peninsulas, and islands, that function as bioregions.
    • The lake was wide at this point, so wide the far bank was only a dim haze, and the water humped up in whitecaps in the middle where the peninsulas fell away and the wind hit it.
    • Just before we descend to the car park, I look out at the bay and a long peninsula of land pointing towards the East.
    • The island's 3,700 acres of tropical rainforest are a biological reserve that also includes five surrounding peninsulas on the Panama mainland.
    • The coastal villages where the salt makers lived stand on islands or peninsulas of firm ground, with marshes and fens on their inland side and salt marshes on the seaward.
    • Livestock were ferried across to neighbouring islands, or herded together in remote peninsulas and mountain regions.
    • This may have resulted in extinction of some species and refuge for others, often in multiple glacial refugia on the Iberian, Italian, and Balkan peninsulas.
    • For the same reasons sanctuaries were sited at the tip of capes or peninsulas or on an island close to the mainland.
    • In mid-winter, the warm water around the Southwest peninsula seems to give them most lightning.
    • Now linked to the mainland by bridge, Skye consists of a series of peninsulas, each with its own sea loch, flanked by spectacular cliffs and little bays, many of which have their own white sandy beaches.
    • In 1958, for example, there was universal praise for the building of the Mackinac Bridge which connects the lower and upper peninsulas in Michigan.
    • The most westerly point on the British mainland, the peninsula could not be further from China.
    • Outdoor activities may be limited, though, as there isn't a single river in the entire peninsula.
    • At this point a spit of land breaks away from the mainland to become the needle-like peninsula of Baja California.
    • When we set off, the water was too rough for us to cross to the peninsula on the other side.
    • They will even create artificial islands and peninsulas to increase the supply of land.
    • As a result of their dependence on thermal updrafts, most hawks tend to follow geographic features, such as mountain ridges and peninsulas, and become concentrated along these geographic features during the fall and spring migrations.
    • At river crossings, lakes, or narrow peninsulas, trails converge and funnel towards and away from caribou calving grounds and summer range.
    • Most of the mainland, however, is a peninsula of mountains, the highest being Olympus.
    Synonyms
    cape, promontory, point, head, headland, foreland, ness, horn, bill, bluff, limb
    Scottish mull
    archaic half-island, half-isle, demi-island

Usage

The spelling of the noun as peninsular instead of peninsula is a common mistake. The spelling peninsula should be used when a noun is intended (the end of the Cape Peninsula), whereas peninsular is the spelling of the adjective (the peninsular part of Malaysia)

Origin

Mid 16th century: from Latin paeninsula, from paene 'almost' + insula 'island'.

Rhymes

insular
 
 

Definition of peninsula in US English:

peninsula

nounpəˈnɪnsələpəˈninsələ
  • A piece of land almost surrounded by water or projecting out into a body of water.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The most westerly point on the British mainland, the peninsula could not be further from China.
    • The best visible and typical features are selected as landmarks: heights; visible road stretches; recognizable outlines of lakes, islands and peninsulas.
    • In 1958, for example, there was universal praise for the building of the Mackinac Bridge which connects the lower and upper peninsulas in Michigan.
    • As a result of their dependence on thermal updrafts, most hawks tend to follow geographic features, such as mountain ridges and peninsulas, and become concentrated along these geographic features during the fall and spring migrations.
    • At this point a spit of land breaks away from the mainland to become the needle-like peninsula of Baja California.
    • For the same reasons sanctuaries were sited at the tip of capes or peninsulas or on an island close to the mainland.
    • Now linked to the mainland by bridge, Skye consists of a series of peninsulas, each with its own sea loch, flanked by spectacular cliffs and little bays, many of which have their own white sandy beaches.
    • Just before we descend to the car park, I look out at the bay and a long peninsula of land pointing towards the East.
    • Most of the mainland, however, is a peninsula of mountains, the highest being Olympus.
    • Outdoor activities may be limited, though, as there isn't a single river in the entire peninsula.
    • The coastal villages where the salt makers lived stand on islands or peninsulas of firm ground, with marshes and fens on their inland side and salt marshes on the seaward.
    • In mid-winter, the warm water around the Southwest peninsula seems to give them most lightning.
    • They will even create artificial islands and peninsulas to increase the supply of land.
    • The lake was wide at this point, so wide the far bank was only a dim haze, and the water humped up in whitecaps in the middle where the peninsulas fell away and the wind hit it.
    • Livestock were ferried across to neighbouring islands, or herded together in remote peninsulas and mountain regions.
    • The island's 3,700 acres of tropical rainforest are a biological reserve that also includes five surrounding peninsulas on the Panama mainland.
    • This may have resulted in extinction of some species and refuge for others, often in multiple glacial refugia on the Iberian, Italian, and Balkan peninsulas.
    • But there are myriads of other discrete territories, such as deserts, mountain ranges, peninsulas, and islands, that function as bioregions.
    • When we set off, the water was too rough for us to cross to the peninsula on the other side.
    • At river crossings, lakes, or narrow peninsulas, trails converge and funnel towards and away from caribou calving grounds and summer range.
    Synonyms
    cape, promontory, point, head, headland, foreland, ness, horn, bill, bluff, limb

Usage

The spelling of the noun as peninsular instead of peninsula is a common mistake. The spelling peninsula should be used when a noun is intended (the end of the Cape Peninsula), whereas peninsular is the spelling of the adjective (the peninsular part of Malaysia)

Origin

Mid 16th century: from Latin paeninsula, from paene ‘almost’ + insula ‘island’.

 
 
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更新时间:2024/12/25 0:42:12