galaxy
外观
参见:Galaxy
英语
[编辑]其他形式
[编辑]- (银河): Galaxy
词源
[编辑]源自中古英语 galaxye、galaxie,源自古法语 galaxie,源自拉丁语 galaxias,源自古希腊语 γαλαξίας (galaxías, “银河系”),源自γάλα (gála, “奶”)。
发音
[编辑]名词
[编辑]galaxy (复数 galaxies)
近义词
[编辑]- (天文学): G (缩写)、star city、trichiliocosm (佛教)
下义词
[编辑]衍生词汇
[编辑]派生语汇
[编辑]- → 斯瓦希里语: galaksi
动词
[编辑]galaxy (第三人称单数简单现在时 galaxies,现在分词 galaxying,一般过去时及过去分词 galaxied)
- 给...布置星系,使...充满星系
- 1836, anonymous, “The Victim Bride: A Tale of Monadnock” in The Philadelphia Visiter, volume 1, number 14, page 53:
- […] how he struggled at one time like a desperate man fiercly [sic] grappling with his mortal foe, and at another like a sanguine lover and noble minded youth, as the cliffy rocks impeded his progress, or dimmed the view he had caught of an aperture, through which the galaxied firmament was seen in its purity and holiness glowing with diamonds and saphires; […]
- 1838, John Edmund Reade, Italy: a poem, in six parts, page 138:
- In dazzling light expands the mighty Dome:
Mirror of Heaven,—but Heaven when she doth wear
All galaxied with Stars her flashing hair!
- In dazzling light expands the mighty Dome:
- 2018, Adrian G. R. Scott, “A Canticle to Creatureliness” in A Night Sea Journey:
- To be dwarfed in a galaxied sky,
doming, arcing, and revolving over
The little space I briefly occupy.
- To be dwarfed in a galaxied sky,
- 1836, anonymous, “The Victim Bride: A Tale of Monadnock” in The Philadelphia Visiter, volume 1, number 14, page 53:
- (古旧) 组成发亮的整体
- 1702, Cotton Mather, Magnalia Christi Americana, book 3, part 4 (“Remains: or, Shorter Accounts of Sundry Divines”), chapter 1 (“Remains of the Firſt Claſſis”), page 213:
- Let all their Vertues then be Galaxied into this one indiſtinct Luſtre, they were Faithful Servants of Chriſt, and Sufferers for their being ſo.
- 1841, Edgar Allan Poe, “Review of New Books” in Graham’s Magazine, volume 18, number 5, page 249:
- The brilliancies on one page of Lalla Roohk [sic] would have sufficed to establish that very reputation which has been in a great measure self-dimned by the galaxied lustre of the entire book.
- 1844, Horace Smith, Arthur Arundel: A Tale of the English Revolution, volume 1, page 172:
- How dazzling must their brightness be when they are galaxied in a single bosom!
- 1702, Cotton Mather, Magnalia Christi Americana, book 3, part 4 (“Remains: or, Shorter Accounts of Sundry Divines”), chapter 1 (“Remains of the Firſt Claſſis”), page 213: