快好知 kuaihz


idyll造句
1. Durham stood for an idyll of ten years. 2. The short romantic idyll was over. 3. It will be a rural idyll. 4. A once charming rural idyll, Emmerdale had become a moral cesspit. 5. The wartime idyll between Pamela Churchill and Harriman has long been publicly known. 6. This rural idyll is, however, the privilege of the minority. 7. Would the idyll she had dreamed of be there again, not smashed to pieces as it seemed to be? 8. The sea crossing served only to emphasise the idyll we left behind. 9. Of or having the nature of an idyll. 10. I've composed only one idyll. 11. But time, unforgivingly, moves on. The idyll shows faultlines: infidelity, disease, age, loss, divorce. 12. The analysis of four different patterns of idyll prospects, round dance, husbands and wives, poets and virginity, shows the hidden philosophical, political and life meaning in these idyll prospects. 13. The application of idyll prospects is considered to be Kundera's innovation of the novel form. 14. Every year thousands of people flee the big cities in search of the pastoral/rural idyll. 15. She finds that the sleepy town she moves to isn'tthe rural idyll she imagined. 16. The expectations of the latter is examined in the light of the rural idyll. 17. In order to arrive at the truth behind the idyll, I must return to the matter of attributions. 18. If we were back in urban reality now, we yet retained a glow imparted by our bucolic idyll. 19. Decades later, the shipbuilder was still enjoying his island idyll. 20. Two pistol shots around ten-thirty on a summer morning in Bosnia and the Edwardian idyll was shattered for ever. 21. After two weeks we had still not found anywhere that matched our idea a country idyll. 22. Though they still talked a lot, Harry felt that their idyll was drawing to an end. 23. This was their closest approach to intimacy during their long Summer idyll. 24. The love affair begins with the traditional boy - meets - girl idyll. 25. One day I made a crucial error ; I told Hitler about this idyll. 26. It was an upbringing he describes as "incredibly happy" – a Durrellian idyll near the New Forest in Hampshire. 27. Not that the John Lewis tale has been an unbroken idyll.