glow
glow 英 [gləʊ] 美 [gloʊ]
vi. 发热;洋溢;绚丽夺目 n. 灼热;色彩鲜艳;兴高采烈
进行时:glowing 过去式:glowed 过去分词:glowed 第三人称单数:glows 名词复数:glows
- To glow is to shine with light. On a clear night when the moon is full, it glows in the sky.
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- vi. 发热;洋溢;绚丽夺目
- n. 灼热;色彩鲜艳;兴高采烈
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1. There was a glow on his face, wrinkled by a life time of suffering, that inspired one with a feeling of unshakable optimism.
他那饱经风霜的多皱的脸上发着光彩, 使人产生一种乐观的感觉。
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2. Astronomers then measure this glow and use it to correct telescope settings to overcome the blurring effect of the atmosphere on far-off images.
天文学家然后测量这个辉光,用它来纠正望远镜的设置以克服大气对遥远图像所造成的模糊效果。
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3. And so I not only experienced the glow, but also kept it burning in my heart.
也因为这样,我不但体验到了这份暖意,而且还使之在我心中继续燃烧。
- glow (n.) mid-15c., "glowing heat," from glow (v.). Meaning "a flush of radiant feeling" is from 1793.
- glow (v.) Old English glowan "to glow, shine as if red-hot," from Proto-Germanic *glo- (source also of Old Saxon gloian, Old Frisian gled "glow, blaze," Old Norse gloa, Old High German gluoen, German glühen "to glow, glitter, shine"), from PIE root *ghel- (2) "to shine," with derivatives referring to bright materials and gold. Figuratively from late 14c. Related: Glowed; glowing. Swedish dialectal and Danish glo also have the extended sense "stare, gaze upon," which is found in Middle English.
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