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 classical ['klæsɪkl.]   添加此单词到默认生词本
a. 古典的, 正统派的, 经典的

[医] 古典的; 标准的, 典型的


  1. I prefer classical music to pop music.
    我喜欢古典音乐,不太喜欢流行音乐。
  2. He is regarded as one of the classical composers in this century.
    他被认为是本世纪第一流的作曲家之一。
  3. Classical scientific ideas about light were changed by Einstein.
    爱因斯坦改变了科学上关于光的传统观念。


classical
[ noun ]
  1. traditional genre of music conforming to an established form and appealing to critical interest and developed musical taste

  2. <noun.communication>
[ adj ]
  1. of or relating to the most highly developed stage of an earlier civilisation and its culture

  2. <adj.all>
    classic Cinese pottery
  3. of or relating to the study of the literary works of ancient Greece and Rome

  4. <adj.pert>
    a classical scholar
  5. of recognized authority or excellence

  6. <adj.all>
    the definitive work on Greece
    classical methods of navigation
  7. (language) having the form used by ancient standard authors

  8. <adj.all>
    classical Greek
  9. of or pertaining to or characteristic of the ancient Greek and Roman cultures

  10. <adj.all>
    classical mythology


Classic \Clas"sic\ (kl[a^]s"s[i^]k), Classical \Clas"sic*al\, a.
[L. classicus relating to the classes of the Roman people,
and especially to the frist class; hence, of the first rank,
superior, from classis class: cf. F. classique. See {Class},
n.]
1. Of or relating to the first class or rank, especially in
literature or art.

Give, as thy last memorial to the age,
One classic drama, and reform the stage. --Byron.

Mr. Greaves may justly be reckoned a classical
author on this subject [Roman weights and coins].
--Arbuthnot.

2. Of or pertaining to the ancient Greeks and Romans, esp. to
Greek or Roman authors of the highest rank, or of the
period when their best literature was produced; of or
pertaining to places inhabited by the ancient Greeks and
Romans, or rendered famous by their deeds.

Though throned midst Latium's classic plains. --Mrs.
Hemans.

The epithet classical, as applied to ancient
authors, is determined less by the purity of their
style than by the period at which they wrote.
--Brande & C.

He [Atterbury] directed the classical studies of the
undergraduates of his college. --Macaulay.

3. Conforming to the best authority in literature and art;
chaste; pure; refined; as, a classical style.

Classical, provincial, and national synods.
--Macaulay.

{Classicals orders}. (Arch.) See under {Order}.

  1. In some distant corner of the mainland an older, more distinctive Greece, a Greece in touch not with its classical roots but simply its recent past, had to exist. It does.
  2. Zoran is the more exotic American equivalent, available at Browns in London, and English Eccentrics has had a great success with its classical motif devore chiffon and velvet. Evening transparency need not be expensive.
  3. But excited board room speculation that classical music could be the much-needed new musical craze were soon scuppered by sales figures.
  4. Ms. Genteel, 18 at the time, performed a work by Debussy and "Hooked on Classics" ("it's like disco classical," she explained).
  5. These are not "stockholders" in the classical sense of the term.
  6. Like most classical musicians, she won't divulge her income.
  7. It's the life of a poker player." Concert pianist Eugene Istomin has loaded his Steinway on a van and is driving from town to town for his 1988 tour _ an unusual way for classical musicians to hit the road.
  8. There are some who would say that the plainess of this elevation shows the collapse of real enthusiasm for the classical style.
  9. Black flags flew on all public buildings in Budapest and state radio played classical music.
  10. He adores classical music.
  11. This idea, known to generations of economics students as the axiom of 'utility maximisation', is the foundation upon which much classical economic theory is built. Anderson rejects this proposition as too narrow an explanation of human behaviour.
  12. His classical music training began at age 9. He studied composition and conducted at Sibelius Academy.
  13. The author learned classical Greek to piece together one of his final "scoops" _ a highly critical account of the Greek philosopher and teacher who was sentenced to death 2,500 years ago.
  14. On a work bench, a portable radio propped on a milk can plays classical music.
  15. The entrance hall of the gallery is lit by floor-to-ceiling windows and serves as a transition between the simple and modern interior and the classical architecture of the surrounding Place de la Concorde and Tuileries gardens.
  16. The Renaissance brought renewed interest in classical antiquity and spawned a new breed of rich and passionate collectors and patrons like the papacy, the Medicis, and Lorenzo the Magnificent.
  17. He conceded there was a danger that classical recordings might come to be viewed as commodity items.
  18. For the estimated 400 not-for-profit stations that play classical music, the changes are generating even greater debate.
  19. The spokesman described Mr. Schmid as "a tried-and-true, classical marketing executive."
  20. So much of the ballet we see in Britain looks polite, pinched, scaled down to fit into notions about the niceness of classical dancing as an activity for little girls.
  21. Since 'classical liberal' sounds rather backward-looking, they have settled on 'market liberal' as shorthand for their political philosophy. 'Market liberals have a cosmopolitan, inclusive vision for society.
  22. The company's major classical labels include Deutsche Grammophon, Decca/London and Philips.
  23. They're set in classical times. When I did `The Mosquito Coast' in Belize I took along some books by Joseph Conrad." She spent this past summer in Baton Rouge, La., with a friend producing a movie.
  24. It was the first opera house to be built in Berlin, and its fine classical exterior has survived the ravages of fire and wartime bombing.
  25. Placido Domingo joined other classical performers in a concert at Carnegie Hall on Tuesday to benefit the Soviet-Armenian Earthquake Relief Fund of the American Red Cross, and organizers said $350,000 was raised.
  26. Edur is superb, an Apollonian premier danseur who uses the classical vocabulary as his native tongue, and can speak of feeling as well as of the beauties of academic propriety.
  27. Who wants to take cocaine and sit around and watch the crops fail?" In April 1958, a quiet young Texan brought classical music to the heart of America and captivated a nation by winning the Tchaikovsky Competition in Moscow.
  28. "Bon Appetit!" was served up as the dessert course for an evening of Hoiby's meat-and-potatoes classical fare.
  29. Just a few years back, Berklee mainly catered to jazz and classical students, says Rob Rose, the chairman of Berklee's performance studies department.
  30. With PM-Obit-Copland, Bjt Leonard Bernstein's visit to Aaron Copland's studio a half century ago opened the door on a friendship between two composers who helped helped put American classical music on the world map.
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