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 horizon [hә'raizәn]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 地平线, 眼界, (天)视地平



    horizon
    [ noun ]
    1. the line at which the sky and Earth appear to meet

    2. <noun.location>
    3. the range of interest or activity that can be anticipated

    4. <noun.attribute>
      It is beyond the horizon of present knowledge
    5. a specific layer or stratum of soil or subsoil in a vertical cross section of land

    6. <noun.location>
    7. the great circle on the celestial sphere whose plane passes through the sensible horizon and the center of the Earth

    8. <noun.location>


    Horizon \Ho*ri"zon\, n. [F., fr. L. horizon, fr. Gr. ? (sc. ?)
    the bounding line, horizon, fr. ? to bound, fr. ? boundary,
    limit.]
    1. The line which bounds that part of the earth's surface
    visible to a spectator from a given point; the apparent
    junction of the earth and sky.

    And when the morning sun shall raise his car
    Above the border of this horizon. --Shak.

    All the horizon round
    Invested with bright rays. --Milton.

    2. (Astron.)
    (a) A plane passing through the eye of the spectator and
    at right angles to the vertical at a given place; a
    plane tangent to the earth's surface at that place;
    called distinctively the sensible horizon.
    (b) A plane parallel to the sensible horizon of a place,
    and passing through the earth's center; -- called also
    {rational horizon} or {celestial horizon}.
    (c) (Naut.) The unbroken line separating sky and water, as
    seen by an eye at a given elevation, no land being
    visible.

    3. (Geol.) The epoch or time during which a deposit was made.

    The strata all over the earth, which were formed at
    the same time, are said to belong to the same
    geological horizon. --Le Conte.

    4. (Painting) The chief horizontal line in a picture of any
    sort, which determines in the picture the height of the
    eye of the spectator; in an extended landscape, the
    representation of the natural horizon corresponds with
    this line.

    5. The limit of a person's range of perception, capabilities,
    or experience; as, children raised in the inner city have
    limited horizons.
    [PJC]

    6. [fig.] A boundary point or line, or a time point, beyond
    which new knowledge or experiences may be found; as, more
    powerful computers are just over the horizon.
    [PJC]

    {Apparent horizon}. See under {Apparent}.

    {Artificial horizon}, a level mirror, as the surface of
    mercury in a shallow vessel, or a plane reflector adjusted
    to the true level artificially; -- used chiefly with the
    sextant for observing the double altitude of a celestial
    body.

    {Celestial horizon}. (Astron.) See def. 2, above.

    {Dip of the horizon} (Astron.), the vertical angle between
    the sensible horizon and a line to the visible horizon,
    the latter always being below the former.

    {Rational horizon}, and {Sensible horizon}. (Astron.) See
    def. 2, above.

    {Visible horizon}. See definitions 1 and 2, above.

    1. A new radar system that will allow military observers to look over the Earth's horizon and get an earlier warning of enemy aircraft or drug-smuggling planes has been turned over to the Air Force.
    2. In an alpine meadow flushed purple with blooming lupines, Stone gazes at a horizon of sawtoothed peaks and tries to explain her love for the land.
    3. Social conflicts are definitely on the horizon."
    4. Panamanians still wait by the harbor and watch the horizon, looking for the proverbial U.S. fleet to sail in.
    5. And by then, expensive automobile sound systems were keeping the gridlocked parking lot by the bay informed about the fire causing the big black plume of smoke we saw on the northern horizon.
    6. One cloud on the horizon in the eastern states is increasing price competition.
    7. Jewish leaders saw both danger and hope on the horizon as they began the High Holidays.
    8. "The dollar is moving sideways because there's nothing on the horizon to shake the market from its lethargy," said Carol Callanan, assistant vice president at Credit Lyonnais in New York.
    9. As a result, there's not enough potential return, compared with super-safe Treasurys, to compensate for the risks looming on the horizon.
    10. There was no sign of any strong buying on the horizon which could take gold back up, he said, suggesting that the market could touch Dollars 320 or below.
    11. I am depressed by pawed-over countryside and cities that sprawl, one into another, far over the horizon.
    12. That problem is made worse because there are no new hit products on the horizon, no new breakthroughs like the VCR of a decade ago.
    13. Indeed, Mr. Markese says that "for most average investors with a long-term horizon," the cost of buying put options "is just too great." Still, he concedes that puts may be useful for some investors.
    14. At midnight, it is halfway between the southern horizon and a point directly overhead.
    15. Ironically, however, the highly automated press, which a GM executive contends equals anything on the horizon into the 21st century, was made in Japan.
    16. As the ship comes over the horizon, it is revealed in parts, the top mast first, just as it would be in the ocean.
    17. "Indecision paralyzes," he said, adding that only a five-year term would give a "horizon for (political) projects."
    18. Everyone, from Victor Chernomyrdin, the prime minister, down, trumpets success over the horizon.
    19. Lunching with his elder brother at Cambridge one day, Penrose impressed Denis Sciama, a cosmologist, by questioning Hoyle's description of galaxies disappearing over the horizon of the universe. 'I drew a picture to show it didn't make sense.
    20. At the same time, Mr. Greenspan noted that there are some bright spots on the horizon in 1992.
    21. The immediate outlook is positive, but there are some in Funchal who see a possible dark cloud on the horizon, although the majority view is that their forecast is too pessimistic.
    22. Congress, in short, has made itself the fattest potential target on the political horizon.
    23. Mr. Darman is like the surrounded general who cracks, "We have them just where we want them." His problem is that the recovery he promised is moving with the horizon.
    24. W.H. Auden and Christopher Isherwood intuited more than 50 years ago that a deluge of horrors on the horizon was ushering in an age of news heros.
    25. Sung Won Sohn, chief economist at Norwest Corp., is warning buyers to be prepared for a few potential "problems on the horizon."
    26. But neither Mr. Parry nor Robert Forrestal, president of the Atlanta Fed, sees a recession on the horizon.
    27. German competition is on the horizon.
    28. "The shuttle missions are booked up to the horizon," shuttle director Richard Truly said following Discovery's return to Earth on Monday. "Our job is to safely build the launch rate up so we can meet that challenge.
    29. Although this would increase the deficit now, it could be structured so that it wouldn't increase the deficit over a five-year horizon.
    30. In its 1989 budget request, the administration foresaw no storm clouds on the economic horizon, contending that growth would slow during the first half of 1988 but then rebound to robust levels in 1989 and beyond.
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