请输入您要查询的英文单词:

 

单词 Angeleno
释义

Definition of Angeleno in English:

Angeleno

(also Angelino, Los Angeleno)
nounPlural Angelenosˌandʒəˈliːnəʊˌændʒəˈlinoʊ
  • A native or inhabitant of Los Angeles.

    as modifier Angeleno sports fans
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Most Angelenos know that Hollywood uses the L.A. River for car chase scenes.
    • The city demanded that funds spent to revitalize the downtown of skyscrapers and trendy restaurants - the only downtown most Angelenos and tourists ever see - be matched with a certain amount for the unseen downtown, which meant Skid Row.
    • A fifth of L.A. County ekes by on some sort of welfare, and enough Angelenos are sufficiently pressed that local aid groups have declared a ‘food emergency.’
    • In a city where the new is prized over the old - ‘tear down and start afresh ‘is the motto of many wealthy Angelenos - what is driving the new fashion for the past?’
    • After the riot was over, sociologists found that black Angelenos expected whites to be more aware of and more sympathetic to their plight, while whites professed to a hardening of their views of blacks' demands.
    • Since the end of November, Angelenos driving north on the Hollywood Freeway have confronted the ultimate marketing imperative.
    • Then an L.A. Times poll revealed that most Angelenos had no faith in their leadership either, three-quarters of them wanting an independent body created to handle the scandal.
    • So much for the returnees: yet another concurrent subplot involves an Angeleno family planning a wedding.
    • That's a daunting figure when you realize that in 1996, according to one state Assembly study, two-thirds of Angelenos lived in households with incomes beneath that level.
    • What do Angelenos fear most during this election year?
    • I'm a native Angeleno and had never been to opening day.
    • If you can keep the green-eyed monster in check, take an evening stroll to view the wallet-wincing yachts owned by young and wealthy Angelinos.
    • Walter Mosley's Easy Rawlins' novels are set in Los Angeles - the city where he grew up - replete with familiar landmarks and references that native Angelenos easily recognize.
    • Lessons learned from Hurricane Katrina convinced some Angelinos, who in past wildfires have stayed to the last minute to try to save their homes, to flee.
    • As for the Angelinos themselves (I live next door to them,) they already think theirs is the most important city in the state so they will just be happy to have that fact recognized.
    • Overnight last night the fire doubled in size, impacting residential areas very popular with Angelinos and also many celebrities.
    • The former Angelenos had relocated their band to New Orleans in June, and unwittingly escaped the wrath of Hurricane Katrina by catching one of the last flights out of Louis Armstrong International Airport on Saturday night, August 27.
    • For years, I've been a huge cheerleader on the web for the Civic Light Opera of South Bay Cities, urging Angelenos to drive the modest distance to their very comfortable auditorium.
    • Certain articles by the all-white staff acknowledged the difficulties facing black Angelenos, but were not adequately supported with images.
    • I was astonished to find it took an hour to drive there from Hollywood, and suddenly I realized that the Watts riots of 1965 must have seemed as remote to the average Angeleno as if they'd occurred in Santa Barbara.

Origin

Late 19th century: from American Spanish.

 
 

Definition of Angeleno in US English:

Angeleno

(also Angelino, Los Angeleno)
nounˌanjəˈlēnōˌændʒəˈlinoʊ
  • A native or inhabitant of Los Angeles.

    as modifier Angeleno sports fans
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Most Angelenos know that Hollywood uses the L.A. River for car chase scenes.
    • If you can keep the green-eyed monster in check, take an evening stroll to view the wallet-wincing yachts owned by young and wealthy Angelinos.
    • I'm a native Angeleno and had never been to opening day.
    • Since the end of November, Angelenos driving north on the Hollywood Freeway have confronted the ultimate marketing imperative.
    • In a city where the new is prized over the old - ‘tear down and start afresh ‘is the motto of many wealthy Angelenos - what is driving the new fashion for the past?’
    • What do Angelenos fear most during this election year?
    • Walter Mosley's Easy Rawlins' novels are set in Los Angeles - the city where he grew up - replete with familiar landmarks and references that native Angelenos easily recognize.
    • That's a daunting figure when you realize that in 1996, according to one state Assembly study, two-thirds of Angelenos lived in households with incomes beneath that level.
    • Overnight last night the fire doubled in size, impacting residential areas very popular with Angelinos and also many celebrities.
    • After the riot was over, sociologists found that black Angelenos expected whites to be more aware of and more sympathetic to their plight, while whites professed to a hardening of their views of blacks' demands.
    • As for the Angelinos themselves (I live next door to them,) they already think theirs is the most important city in the state so they will just be happy to have that fact recognized.
    • For years, I've been a huge cheerleader on the web for the Civic Light Opera of South Bay Cities, urging Angelenos to drive the modest distance to their very comfortable auditorium.
    • A fifth of L.A. County ekes by on some sort of welfare, and enough Angelenos are sufficiently pressed that local aid groups have declared a ‘food emergency.’
    • The city demanded that funds spent to revitalize the downtown of skyscrapers and trendy restaurants - the only downtown most Angelenos and tourists ever see - be matched with a certain amount for the unseen downtown, which meant Skid Row.
    • So much for the returnees: yet another concurrent subplot involves an Angeleno family planning a wedding.
    • Then an L.A. Times poll revealed that most Angelenos had no faith in their leadership either, three-quarters of them wanting an independent body created to handle the scandal.
    • Lessons learned from Hurricane Katrina convinced some Angelinos, who in past wildfires have stayed to the last minute to try to save their homes, to flee.
    • I was astonished to find it took an hour to drive there from Hollywood, and suddenly I realized that the Watts riots of 1965 must have seemed as remote to the average Angeleno as if they'd occurred in Santa Barbara.
    • The former Angelenos had relocated their band to New Orleans in June, and unwittingly escaped the wrath of Hurricane Katrina by catching one of the last flights out of Louis Armstrong International Airport on Saturday night, August 27.
    • Certain articles by the all-white staff acknowledged the difficulties facing black Angelenos, but were not adequately supported with images.

Origin

Late 19th century: from American Spanish.

 
 
随便看

 

英语词典包含464360条英英释义在线翻译词条,基本涵盖了全部常用单词的英英翻译及用法,是英语学习的有利工具。

 

Copyright © 2004-2022 Newdu.com All Rights Reserved
更新时间:2025/1/12 2:19:52