释义 |
ad noun /æd/ /æd/ (British English also advert) (both informal) (also advertisement) jump to other results - a notice, picture or film telling people about a product, job or service
- The TV ads were first run last year.
- They've produced an ad for a new chocolate bar.
- We put an ad on a classifieds website.
- A $10 million TV ad campaign
- an ad agency
see also attack ad, banner adExtra Examples- A lot of claims are made in the ad.
- She took out a full-page ad in a women's magazine.
- TV ads for cars
- The ad appeared on all major channels.
- You can put your own small ads in local papers.
- He was scanning the classified ads.
- You may have seen the full-page ads that we ran in the New York Times.
Topics TV, radio and newsb1, Businessb1Word Originmid 19th cent.: abbreviation.
AD abbreviation /ˌeɪ ˈdiː/ /ˌeɪ ˈdiː/ (also A.D. especially in US English) jump to other results - used in the Christian calendar to show a particular number of years since the year when Christ was believed to have been born (from Latin ‘Anno Domini’)
- in (the year) AD 55
- in 55 AD
- in the fifth century AD
compare AH, BC, BCE, CECulture the calendarthe calendarBritain and the US follow the Gregorian calendar, which replaced the Roman Julian calendar in 1752. The year is divided into 12 months, with 30 or 31 days in each month, except February, which has 28 days. An extra day is added to February every fourth year, called a leap year, to keep the calendar in time with the moon. A well-known verse helps people remember how many days there are in each month:“Thirty days hath September,April, June and November.All the rest have thirty-one,Excepting February alone,Which hath twenty-eight days clear,and twenty-nine in each leap year.”The calendar year starts on 1 January, New Year’s Day. The number of each year (2003, 2004, etc.) represents the number of years that have passed since the birth of Jesus Christ. The year 2000 marked the end of the second millennium (= a period of 1 000 years) since Christ was born. The years before Christ are described as BC (= before Christ), for example, 55 BC, or BCE (= before the Common Era). AD (Latin Anno Domini, meaning ‘in the year of the Lord’) or CE (= Common Era) are put before or after the date for the years after Christ's birth, for example, AD 44 or 44 AD, but they are not used with years after about 200 AD. Some cultural and religious groups use different calendars: the year 2000 in the Gregorian calendar began during the year 5760 in the Jewish calendar, 1420 in the Islamic calendar and 1921 in the Hindu calendar.The academic year used by schools and colleges in Britain runs from September to July, with short holidays at Christmas and in the spring and a long summer vacation. In the US the academic year runs from August or September to May or June. Many business companies have a financial year (= a period of accounting) that runs from April to the following March. The tax year in the US is the same as the calendar year but the tax year in Britain begins on 5 April. The reason is that in the Middle Ages the calendar year began on 25 March, not 1 January. When the Gregorian Calendar was introduced, an adjustment was needed and 11 days were removed from September 1752. To avoid being accused of collecting a full year's taxes in a short year, the government made the end of the 1752-3 tax year 4 April.Many festivals are celebrated during the year. Christmas and Easter are the main Christian festivals. Jews remember Passover and Yom Kippur. Ramadan, a month of fasting (= not eating during the day), and Eid ul-Fitr are celebrated by Muslims. Diwali, the Hindu festival of light, takes place in October or November, and the Chinese celebrate their new year in January or February. Special occasions such as Bonfire Night in Britain and Thanksgiving in the US are enjoyed by almost everyone. Topics Timec1, Historyc1
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