释义 |
rob·in·son·ade \|räbə̇nsə|nād, ˌrōbə̇nzōˈnädə\ noun (plural robinson·ades \-ādz\ ; also robinson·aden \-ädən\) Usage: often capitalized Etymology: German robinsonade, from Robinson Crusoe, sailor who survives by great resourcefulness when marooned on a desert island in the fictional prose narrative Robinson Crusoe (1719) by Daniel Defoe died 1731 English journalist and novelist : a fictitious narrative of often fantastic adventures in real or imaginary distant places; especially : a story of the adventures of a person marooned on a desert island < the Robinsonade in world literature — E.G.Gudde > |