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 Olympics 添加此单词到默认生词本
[әu'limpiks]
[pl.](=Olympic Games)奥林匹克运动会



    olympics
    [ noun ]
    the modern revival of the ancient games held once every 4 years in a selected country
    <noun.event>


    Olympic games \O*lym"pic games\, or Olympics \O*lym"pics\
    A modified revival of the ancient Olympian games, consisting
    of international athletic games, races, etc., now held once
    in four years, the first having been at Athens in 1896.

    Note: There are now two sets of modern Olympic games, the
    summer games and the winter games. Both had been held
    every four years, in the same year, but in 1998 for the
    first time the winter games began to be held two years
    after the summer games, though each series is still
    held only once every four years. The number and types
    of sports contests held at the olympics has greatly
    expanded from the original number.
    [Webster 1913 Suppl. +PJC]

    1. The attack followed an outburst of anti-U.S. sentiment spurred by incidents involving American athletes and news media during the Olympics.
    2. He maintained ties with West Germany, refused to break relations with Israel after the Six-Day War, refused to boycott the 1984 Olympics in Los Angeles, and declined to back Soviet interventions in Czechoslovakia and Afghanistan.
    3. Ana Quirot has had the misfortune to be Cuban in a decade when politics have been as big a factor at the Olympics as the stopwatch. Since the early 1980s she has been winning World Cups and Pan-American titles.
    4. I mean, no one says trunks anymore." Bobby Shriver, 36, venture capitalist and Special Olympics producer, New York: "I remember once I was out walking with my grandmother.
    5. Passenger luggage underwent double-checks, and the Kyodo News Service reported a security effort more intense than that at the Seoul Olympics.
    6. It is present at these Olympics as a demonstration sport, whose medals don't figure in any official reckonings.
    7. More than halfway through the Olympics, fears of an attack by North Korea against the Games have receded.
    8. Greenspan is hardly a disinterested observer of the Olympics, or athletic excellence.
    9. The committee has used the Olympics to improve the environment rather than accepting it as an ugly polluting monster, too powerful to be turned aside.
    10. But this time around, advertiser interest in the Olympics has been relatively low.
    11. Strauss continued to conduct at Third Reich musical events, however, including the 1936 Olympics and the opening of the 1938 music festival, the Reichsmusiktage, that included the degenerate music exhibit.
    12. In the end, both ABC and Special Olympics, the show's host, hope to realize separate goals: ABC gets a low-cost _ about $650,000 _ holiday special to compete with NBC's "The Cosby Show."
    13. Even so, Lintas's Mr. Schultz estimates $35 million to $40 million in Olympics time remains unsold.
    14. CBS officials said Wednesday that getting the television rights to the 1992 Winter Olympics was the first step in rebuilding the beleaguered network and making it No. 1 again.
    15. So far there are no boycotts or political shenanigans expected from any of the 150-odd nations competing, so the event may be even more compelling than the Olympics.
    16. North Korea has emerged as the biggest threat to the Seoul Olympics following the easing of political tensions in South Korea and agreement by most Communist countries to attend the Games.
    17. During the Barcelona Olympics Videotron, the Canadian-owned company, with cable franchises in south and west London, offered its customers unprecedented choice.
    18. France opened a 20-mile highway linking Chambery and Albertville for the 1992 Winter Olympics in February.
    19. They were the only entrants. Manchester was, of course, chosen as Britain's candidate for the 1998 Olympics because of its convenient proximity to Bowdon Croquet Club where the prestigious annual croquet invitation event, the President's Cup, is played.
    20. Lithuania has followed suit, while hundreds of Latvian intellectuals have formulated demands for sovereignty extending to independent membership for their republic in the United Nations and their own team at the Olympics.
    21. The Olympics, which will be held Sept. 17-Oct.
    22. If we come to the conclusion that three-day eventing isn't possible in Atlanta conditions, we're going to come out and say so. 'This research has implications that stretch a long way past the 1996 Olympics.
    23. Retton was the sensation of the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles.
    24. Washington Quite a few "over" words come to mind in describing this or any recent Olympics.
    25. Its tray liners are printed with stories about the Olympics.
    26. While the Olympics are still more than five years away, the Atlanta committee has already experienced some growing pains.
    27. North Korea demanded to co-host the Games, but international Olympics authorities refused.
    28. After that rigmarole, which is what the Olympics really are about, first across the finish line wins.
    29. The task force, the largest to take to the streets of Los Angeles since the 1984 Olympics, arrested 634 people for investigation of a variety of offenses, with 334 suspected of being gang members, said police spokesman Bill Frio.
    30. Derwinski indicated that the United States would ask visiting Chinese Foreign Minister Wu Xueqian to use his country's leverage with North Korea to prevent any disruption of the Olympics.
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