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单词 Sardinian
释义

Definition of Sardinian in English:

Sardinian

adjective sɑːˈdɪnɪənsɑrˈdɪniən
  • Relating to Sardinia, its people, or their language.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • You can't fail to find an exquisite place to eat in Pisa, everything from Tuscan and Sardinian specialities at Il Nuraghe, to dishes elsewhere that even the chef is not sure of!
    • The service at this four-star hotel is very friendly and personal despite the size; all the rooms feature all mod cons and are decorated with a nod to typical Sardinian style, albeit in a homogenous way.
    • Sicilian food is nothing like the food of Tuscany, while Sardinian cooking is a million miles away from the cuisine of Emilia Romagna.
    • A Sardinian speciality is a large type of ravioli, around five to six centimetres square, with various fillings such as egg and chopped mint, or mashed potato and soft cheese.
    • Proud Sardinian producers already are taking steps to preserve their newly discovered heritage.
    • The foursome downed four courses of Arcodoro's famous Sardinian food during the three-hour repast.
    • It will largely be set in Sardinia where the teenage Bond runs into a group of Sardinian bandits and a mad Italian count who is trying to restore the Holy Roman Empire.
    • It's not fast - most models are slower than those they replace - and a day bombing around the Sardinian coastline failed to persuade me that it was fun.
    • I swear the minute we entered Sardinian airspace a little man in a crisp, white suit raced down the beach shouting: ‘Boss, a plane.’
    • A genetic database of 4000 people from the Sardinian villages of Perdasdefogu and Talana is already being compiled to search for the genetic origins of heart disease, asthma and depression.
    • But you'd have to be pretty hard-hearted to hold that against this quirky, individual and cosy four-star Sardinian hotel.
    • Mind you, it is still possible to spot the odd royal sipping Campari and soda at one of the quayside restaurants in Porto Cervo, the main town on this part of the Sardinian coast and a magnet for the super-rich.
    • The ten large bedrooms are all furnished in an antique Sardinian style, again with furniture from the Montiferru region.
    • The Sardinian interior is beautiful: white rocks and dark green vegetation.
    • When this proved inadequate he responded with a range of reforms limiting police powers, introducing the principle of consultation at local level, strengthening the Council of State, and granting greater Sardinian autonomy.
    • If Occitan music is the sound of heaven, then Sardinian music is the sound of the earth.
    • When a cholera outbreak closed the Sardinian border (Nice was not yet part of France), the utilitarian reformer made do with Cannes, building a chateau there for his daughter who died too quickly to enjoy it.
    • We chatted to him through the evening, catching up on his news, and at the end of our meal, he came over and served us - on the house - an authentic Sardinian liqueur, made of lemon.
    • He is a talented young Sardinian chef with the same deep-rooted passion and instinctive feeling for food.
    • North west of Oristano at Santa Cristina, disconcertingly close to the superstrada, are reminders of Sardinian life 3,500 years ago.
noun sɑːˈdɪnɪənsɑrˈdɪniən
  • 1A native or inhabitant of Sardinia.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Scotland is the sixth most homogeneous population in Europe, behind the Lapps, Sardinians, Basques, Icelanders and Finnish.
    • A muscly Sardinian, it is gold and orange tinged and delivers a pungent floral nose.
    • Cast as the recollected observations of a Sardinian who had long ago traveled across Europe and Great Britain (as related to an Englishman), it is, in effect, a disquisition on national character.
    • He eventually left the kitchen and was replaced by a Sardinian who cooked only French food because he believed that ‘Italian food was for peasants’.
    • However, Inter's players are both injured and the Sardinians are showing strong signs of revival.
    • This led them to suggest that Sardinians might be, like the Basques, descendants of hunter-gatherers whose genomes were only mildly affected by incoming farmers.
    • At 36 years old, he is revelling in this Indian summer of a season which has reminded Chelsea's fans, and followers of the Premiership more widely, just how blessed they have been to witness the Sardinian's skill.
    • He governed Sardinia, expelling usurers and restricting the demands made on the Sardinians for the upkeep of himself and his staff.
    • Useless as farmland, next to useless for grazing; and the Sardinians, like many island tribes, never were very keen on fishing.
    • Robert of Stamfordham was unplaced in the Gouren, but he reached the final of the 100 kg Backhold wrestling where he was beaten by the best of the Sardinians.
    • For Sardinians, it has just been another example of what they see as mainland prejudice.
    • It was he who put his faith in him almost ten years ago, when the little Sardinian was a virtual unknown charged with filling the huge boots of one Diego Armando Maradona at Napoli.
    • But now, like its near neighbour Corsica, the Sardinians have realised that what is good for the stars should also be shared with the rest of us mere mortals!
  • 2mass noun The Romance language of Sardinia.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Similar examples can also be found in Catalan, Galician, Portuguese, Romanian, Sardinian, and Spanish.
    • Between the 16th and 18th centuries, the first literary texts emerged in Sardinian as part of a purist-inspired bid to develop a cultivated Sardinian language on the basis of the Lugudorian dialect.

Rhymes

Argentinian, Arminian, Augustinian, Carthaginian, Darwinian, dominion, Guinean, Justinian, Ninian, Palestinian, Virginian
 
 

Definition of Sardinian in US English:

Sardinian

adjectivesɑrˈdɪniənsärˈdinēən
  • Relating to Sardinia, its people, or their language.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • North west of Oristano at Santa Cristina, disconcertingly close to the superstrada, are reminders of Sardinian life 3,500 years ago.
    • We chatted to him through the evening, catching up on his news, and at the end of our meal, he came over and served us - on the house - an authentic Sardinian liqueur, made of lemon.
    • You can't fail to find an exquisite place to eat in Pisa, everything from Tuscan and Sardinian specialities at Il Nuraghe, to dishes elsewhere that even the chef is not sure of!
    • But you'd have to be pretty hard-hearted to hold that against this quirky, individual and cosy four-star Sardinian hotel.
    • Proud Sardinian producers already are taking steps to preserve their newly discovered heritage.
    • A genetic database of 4000 people from the Sardinian villages of Perdasdefogu and Talana is already being compiled to search for the genetic origins of heart disease, asthma and depression.
    • The ten large bedrooms are all furnished in an antique Sardinian style, again with furniture from the Montiferru region.
    • I swear the minute we entered Sardinian airspace a little man in a crisp, white suit raced down the beach shouting: ‘Boss, a plane.’
    • Mind you, it is still possible to spot the odd royal sipping Campari and soda at one of the quayside restaurants in Porto Cervo, the main town on this part of the Sardinian coast and a magnet for the super-rich.
    • It's not fast - most models are slower than those they replace - and a day bombing around the Sardinian coastline failed to persuade me that it was fun.
    • When this proved inadequate he responded with a range of reforms limiting police powers, introducing the principle of consultation at local level, strengthening the Council of State, and granting greater Sardinian autonomy.
    • If Occitan music is the sound of heaven, then Sardinian music is the sound of the earth.
    • A Sardinian speciality is a large type of ravioli, around five to six centimetres square, with various fillings such as egg and chopped mint, or mashed potato and soft cheese.
    • The Sardinian interior is beautiful: white rocks and dark green vegetation.
    • He is a talented young Sardinian chef with the same deep-rooted passion and instinctive feeling for food.
    • Sicilian food is nothing like the food of Tuscany, while Sardinian cooking is a million miles away from the cuisine of Emilia Romagna.
    • The service at this four-star hotel is very friendly and personal despite the size; all the rooms feature all mod cons and are decorated with a nod to typical Sardinian style, albeit in a homogenous way.
    • It will largely be set in Sardinia where the teenage Bond runs into a group of Sardinian bandits and a mad Italian count who is trying to restore the Holy Roman Empire.
    • When a cholera outbreak closed the Sardinian border (Nice was not yet part of France), the utilitarian reformer made do with Cannes, building a chateau there for his daughter who died too quickly to enjoy it.
    • The foursome downed four courses of Arcodoro's famous Sardinian food during the three-hour repast.
nounsɑrˈdɪniənsärˈdinēən
  • 1A native or inhabitant of Sardinia.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Cast as the recollected observations of a Sardinian who had long ago traveled across Europe and Great Britain (as related to an Englishman), it is, in effect, a disquisition on national character.
    • But now, like its near neighbour Corsica, the Sardinians have realised that what is good for the stars should also be shared with the rest of us mere mortals!
    • Scotland is the sixth most homogeneous population in Europe, behind the Lapps, Sardinians, Basques, Icelanders and Finnish.
    • Useless as farmland, next to useless for grazing; and the Sardinians, like many island tribes, never were very keen on fishing.
    • Robert of Stamfordham was unplaced in the Gouren, but he reached the final of the 100 kg Backhold wrestling where he was beaten by the best of the Sardinians.
    • For Sardinians, it has just been another example of what they see as mainland prejudice.
    • At 36 years old, he is revelling in this Indian summer of a season which has reminded Chelsea's fans, and followers of the Premiership more widely, just how blessed they have been to witness the Sardinian's skill.
    • It was he who put his faith in him almost ten years ago, when the little Sardinian was a virtual unknown charged with filling the huge boots of one Diego Armando Maradona at Napoli.
    • A muscly Sardinian, it is gold and orange tinged and delivers a pungent floral nose.
    • However, Inter's players are both injured and the Sardinians are showing strong signs of revival.
    • This led them to suggest that Sardinians might be, like the Basques, descendants of hunter-gatherers whose genomes were only mildly affected by incoming farmers.
    • He eventually left the kitchen and was replaced by a Sardinian who cooked only French food because he believed that ‘Italian food was for peasants’.
    • He governed Sardinia, expelling usurers and restricting the demands made on the Sardinians for the upkeep of himself and his staff.
  • 2The Romance language of Sardinia, which has several distinct dialects.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Between the 16th and 18th centuries, the first literary texts emerged in Sardinian as part of a purist-inspired bid to develop a cultivated Sardinian language on the basis of the Lugudorian dialect.
    • Similar examples can also be found in Catalan, Galician, Portuguese, Romanian, Sardinian, and Spanish.
 
 
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更新时间:2025/1/11 5:33:23