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golden age造句
(1) The golden age is before us, not behind us. (2) The Elizabethan period was the golden age of English drama. (3) She was an actress from the golden age of the cinema. (4) You grew up in the golden age of American children's books. (5) The book takes a nostalgic look at the golden age of the railway. (6) In some ways it was a golden age. (7) Athens is in the middle of her golden age. (8) It was the golden age of the fakirs. (9) For me, too, a golden age. (10) Golden Age: Ideology and cultural history. (11) A golden age, they said. (12) We're living in the Golden Age. (13) She asked us to go back to the golden age of Callaghan. (14) Although we don't know it yet, the golden age of the unregulated market is past. (15) Others see a new golden age of business and technology that will lift the market to unimagined heights. (16) He argues that, just as Antwerp's golden age depended on openness, so will its future. (17) The presumed answer is that the golden age has long since disappeared below the horizon of memory. (18) The image of a golden age is central both to Leapor's and to Goldsmith's treatment of rural life. (19) Adults often look back on their childhood as a golden age. (20) I used to see three films a week in the golden age when cinemas were flourishing. (21) And yet Penzias makes a good case for the new golden age[http://], and his urbane discourse is both enlivening and instructive. (22) A rallying point was needed and, for Tillyard, one was found in the golden age of the Elizabethan world. (23) Her career is entering what can only be described as its golden age. (24) Besides the cyclical view and the progressive, there was the important tradition concerning a Golden Age in the remote past. (25) Many consider the '30s and '40s to be the golden age of Hollywood movies. (26) Reagan appealed to the average American's sense of nostalgia for a golden age. (27) Instead of realizing that neo-realism was a beginning, they assumed it was an end, a golden age. (28) The height of the cold war was also the period which has come to be known as the golden age of capitalism. (29) Both Aristotle and Plato, our major sources of information about the golden age of Athenian democracy, were deeply critical. (30) He has become a scapegoat and an excuse, so that romantic writers can maintain their vision of a lost golden age.