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 curtain ['kɚtn.]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 帐, 幕, 窗帘

vt. 装帘子于, 遮蔽

[建] 幕, 帘, 帷


  1. I drew the curtain as it was getting dark.
    天黑了,我把窗帘拉上。
  2. A part of the sitting room was curtained off.
    起居室的一部分被帘子隔开了。
  3. The castle was hidden behind a curtain of smoke.
    城堡被一层烟雾遮掩着。


curtain
[ noun ]
  1. hanging cloth used as a blind (especially for a window)

  2. <noun.artifact>
  3. any barrier to communication or vision

  4. <noun.object>
    a curtain of secrecy
    a curtain of trees
[ verb ]
  1. provide with drapery

  2. <verb.possession>
    curtain the bedrooms


Curtain \Cur"tain\ (k[^u]r"t[i^]n; 48), n. [OE.cortin,
curtin,fr. OF. cortine, curtine, F. courtine, LL. cortina,
curtian (in senses 1 and 2), also, small court, small
inclosure surrounded by walls, from cortis court. See
{Court}.]
1. A hanging screen intended to darken or conceal, and
admitting of being drawn back or up, and reclosed at
pleasure; esp., drapery of cloth or lace hanging round a
bed or at a window; in theaters, and like places, a
movable screen for concealing the stage.

2. (Fort.) That part of the rampart and parapet which is
between two bastions or two gates. See Illustrations of
{Ravelin} and {Bastion}.

3. (Arch.) That part of a wall of a building which is between
two pavilions, towers, etc.

4. A flag; an ensign; -- in contempt. [Obs.] --Shak.

{Behind the curtain}, in concealment; in secret.

{Curtain lecture}, a querulous lecture given by a wife to her
husband within the bed curtains, or in bed. --Jerrold.

A curtain lecture is worth all the sermons in the
world for teaching the virtues of patience and
long-suffering. --W. Irving.

{The curtain falls}, the performance closes.

{The curtain rises}, the performance begins.

{To draw the curtain}, to close it over an object, or to
remove it; hence:
(a) To hide or to disclose an object.
(b) To commence or close a performance.

{To drop the curtain}, to end the tale, or close the
performance.


Curtain \Cur"tain\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Curtained}
(k[^u]r"t[i^]nd; 48); p. pr. & vb. n. {Curtaining}.]
To inclose as with curtains; to furnish with curtains.

So when the sun in bed
Curtained with cloudy red. --Milton.

  1. "It's great to be back," he shouted over the wild applause and standing ovation that embraced him at the final curtain.
  2. It's recalcitrant." Lang arrives at the theater two or three hours before the curtain goes up. "I'm chronically early," he says. "The deeper I get into a run, the more necessary it is for me to put in the time.
  3. "The `wire curtain' and the concrete pillars were almost completely removed from Saturday to Monday," MTI said Monday.
  4. Ronald Reagan, leaning on American-made semiconductors as his excuse, thereupon began to draw a high protectionist curtain along his country's western coastline.
  5. Mrs. Hessman has had to curtain over her bathtub view, which now includes her new neighbor's upstairs.
  6. He chooses the artists, welcomes visiting dignitaries, holds forth in a thick Franconian accent from the stage curtain, and is a formidable presence behind the scenes.
  7. There is an inevitable falloff after the exuberant first act. But that's because the ending has been telegraphed long before the play is over and the involved plot convolutions must be straightened out before the curtain falls.
  8. What's amazing is that Lavin manages to evoke a sense of pity for this woman, making the ending moving and a bit teary as mother and daughter come to a sort of uneasy truce at the final curtain.
  9. But, as President Lech Walesa of Poland remarked during his visit to the UK, 'the political iron curtain should not be replaced by a silver curtain of indifference'.
  10. But, as President Lech Walesa of Poland remarked during his visit to the UK, 'the political iron curtain should not be replaced by a silver curtain of indifference'.
  11. A red curtain behind them displayed side-by-side national emblems _ Vietnam's yellow star and Cambodia's Angkor Wat temple.
  12. Williams received his award before the curtain went up on the Hasty Pudding's 141st annual musical farce, a spoof on Prohibition called "Whiskey Business."
  13. Harrison made it through two acts Wednesday before the curtain came down and the audience was told he was unable to continue. Producer Elliott Martin blamed the medicine Harrison received after the surgery.
  14. But before the curtain went up, he had a classic case of jitters.
  15. The oldest is a sixth-century Coptic sanctuary curtain; the most recent is a 20th-century American pictorial wall hanging.
  16. Was it the food and consumer goods shortages alone, or were the words transmitted across the iron curtain by the BBC World Service, the Voice of America, Radio Free Europe and Radio Liberty really effective?
  17. "A curtain has been dropped on some of the entrepreneurship we've seen in New England over the last decade," he said.
  18. Pursley quickly pulled a curtain across the viewing area to block witnesses' views.
  19. The government agent "pulled back the curtain" and disclosed the corruption in the Swiss franc pit, just as a Great Plains flimflam artist was disclosed as the true Oz, said James Fleissner, an assistant U.S. attorney.
  20. Before the curtain went up for the fourth act, Anthony Dowell, the company's artistic director, told the audience that Miss Almeida had been dancing in severe pain and was unable to complete the third act.
  21. In true Brechtian style, a white curtain swirls across the stage between scenes, and song titles are projected onto screens on either side of the stage.
  22. Such fighters are called "abrebocas," which means curtain raisers.
  23. At one point, however, he interrupted his remarks to hold a whispered conversation with a woman behind the stage's curtain.
  24. The curtain rises on the New Victoria, the main auditorium at the Peacocks Arts & Entertainment Centre in Woking next Tuesday.
  25. Mr. Stockman left before the final curtain.
  26. The St. Louis Symphony played the other two, one a slight curtain raiser by Jacob Druckman, the other a piano concerto by Joseph Schwantner that incorporated a previous work as one of its three movements.
  27. A 14 x 19 inch pastel by Degas of two young dancers taking a curtain call sold for Dollars 7m (Pounds 4.76m) at Christie's in New York on Tuesday night.
  28. Art had triumphed over life, or was it the other way around? "For every actor, there's that adrenalin that gets going once the curtain goes up or once the camera starts rolling.
  29. George Kennan's "long telegram" provided U.S. policy with a theoretical framework, while Churchill's "iron curtain" speech at Fulton, Mo., provided a suitable rhetoric.
  30. "We found a plastic shower curtain in one of our bins," he said.
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