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alexander

/al-ig-zan-der, -zahn-/US // ˌæl ɪgˈzæn dər, -ˈzɑn- //UK // (ˌælɪɡˈzɑːndə) //

亚历山大,阿列克谢,阿列克谢尔,亚历山德拉

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : a cocktail made with crème de cacao with gin or brandy and sweet cream.

Examples

  • Byrd always tried to make sure his team wasn’t worn out come February and March, and Alexander has been able to do the same — especially because most of Belmont’s games have been blowouts.

  • “With people who we think are transformational leaders, it’s important to help them up front, when they need it,” Alexander said.

  • The payments took place from 2012 to 2017 and involved a “no-show” job taken by Alexander’s father.

  • Alexander’s office did not make the senator available for an interview with Fortune.

  • This year, Alexander provided grief training resources for her human resources staff as well as discussion guides related to grief and loss for managers.

  • Alexander Stephens, vice president of the Confederacy, summed up the Southern attitude in his 1861 Cornerstone Speech.

  • So did Alexander Hamilton, and on a grander scale than your AmEx.

  • Alexander and Adorno were doing what they could to save the officer on the passenger side, Liu.

  • Johnson dashed into the base and called to his partner, 23-year-old Tantania Alexander.

  • Then, a couple of years later, I learned that Scott [Alexander] and Larry [Karaszewski] had written a script.

  • Alexander Pope died: the celebrated English poet and epistolary writer.

  • Alexander Crichton, an English physician, died near London, aged 93.

  • Alexander Berkman spent fourteen years in prison; under perhaps more than commonly harsh and severe conditions.

  • The dominions of Alexander and of Trajan were small when compared with the immense area of the Scythian desert.

  • In mentioning my friends here, I must not omit Rubinsteins servant Alexander.

alexander - EE Dictionary | EE Dictionary