prodigy
prodigy 英 [ˈprɒdədʒi] 美 [ˈprɑdədʒi]
n. 奇迹,奇事;奇才;奇观;预兆
名词复数:prodigies
- A prodigy is someone who is so naturally talented at something that they become a master of that particular skill as a child––you can be a musical prodigy or a math prodigy. Mozart was one, writing symphonies and playing for kings when he was only five years old.
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- n. 奇迹,奇事;奇才;奇观;预兆
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1. Of the prodigy of all wraths, said others.
另一些人说,这是所有的愤怒创造出来的奇迹。
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2. His path to this Song peak began in 1982, when, as a 19-year-old kung fu prodigy, he left his family's home not far from the Mongolian border and made a pilgrimage to the Shaolin Temple.
释德建早在1982年就来到了嵩山的这处峰顶,当时他还是一位年仅十九岁的功夫奇才,在离开了距离蒙古边境不远的故乡之后,朝圣般的来到了少林寺。
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3. He was a mathematical prodigy.
他是一位数学天才。
- prodigy (n.) late 15c., "sign, portent, something extraordinary from which omens are drawn," from Latin prodigium "prophetic sign, omen, portent, prodigy," from pro "forth, before" (see pro-) + -igium, a suffix or word of unknown origin, perhaps from the same source as aio "I say" (see adage). Meaning "child with exceptional abilities" first recorded 1650s. Related: Prodigial.
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