青年中文青年中文

a while ago的意思

a while ago中文翻譯:

方才,剛才

相似詞語短語

a short while ago───方才

a little while ago───方才;前不久;剛才

a while───一會兒

a little while───不久, 一會兒; 一時半刻; 少

a monment ago───一個月前

ago───adv.以前;adj.以前的;n.(Ago)(美)阿戈(人名)

after a while───不久,過一會兒; 不一會兒;過了一會兒

quite a while───半晌;有一陣子,半天;相當長一段時間

a moment ago───剛才,片刻之前;剛才; 將才

雙語使用場景

John wrote me a while ago about his new baby.───約翰曾給我寫信講他的新生兒。

He fought with the urge to smoke one of the cigars he'd given up a while ago.───他克制自己的煙癮,不去想剛才沒吸的那支雪茄。

For many people, summer started quite a while ago.───對許多人來說,夏天才剛開始。

I remember , quite a while ago , that in engineering classes among the best, brightest and hardest working students were - the Chinese .───我記得,很久已前,在工科類班級里最好的,最聰明的及最努力的學生來自于中國。

I think Cannavaro was right when he said a while ago that I need to play for my club to stay in the national team.───我覺得卡納瓦羅說得對,我需要在俱樂部的比賽來獲得在國家隊的位置。

A while ago, I got a "seh" out of him.───不好,不久以前他發了一個“二”的音

"Contribution to world growth matters more than size. From that point of view, China passed Japan quite a while ago, " she said.───瑞銀的王濤建議,我們也許不必太在意這個里程碑,“對世界經濟增長的貢獻遠比經濟總量更加重要,從這一點來說,中國早在幾年前已超越日本。”

Anyway, what I am verbosely trying to say is that I finished the lyrics to a song I wrote a while ago.───總而言之,我啰啰嗦嗦所想要說的是:我為我最近寫的歌填了詞。

A while ago Ming Ming told us the riverbank by his house is a great location to see the moonrise. I never had the chance to go.───記得前些日子銘銘說過在他家旁的江邊看月出很棒,但是一直沒有機會去看。

英語使用場景

But a while ago i found a way how to sneak it- i stuff it to the decollete .

The laughter had stopped a while ago and, ever since, Lydia's imagination had been giving her a hard time.

A while ago I had a dispiriting conversation with another eminent European scientist.

By his miserable silence a while ago he had forfeited all chance of helping her.

I bust up with Tim a while ago.

A while ago some fool offered a Matriarch's Whip for sale on the black market.

A while ago she had felt hungry; now her appetite seemed suddenly to have faded.

Quite a while ago Clayton Christensen of Harvard has mainstreamed the term "disruptive innovations".

He fought for the title a while ago.