chronicle 的 2 个定义
- a chronological record of events; a history.
chron·i·cled, chron·i·cling.
- to record in or as in a chronicle.
chronicle 近义词
report, recount
account, narrative
更多chronicle例句
- River officials did not allow him to take with him the two envelopes with the manuscripts of these chronicles and other articles.
- I began to write these chronicles at Bossier with the simple goal of distracting my mind from the hell in which I was immersed.
- Thirst, her debut, didn’t emerge for six more years, but those post-hike chronicles provided the details that make it such a compelling read.
- His resulting chronicle became a bestselling book, The Outlaw Ocean, but that only spurred Urbina to go farther.
- She welcomed trail magic from strangers who followed her journey online via her frank Instagram chronicles.
- This monthly series will chronicle the history of the American century as seen through the eyes of its novelists.
- Reprinted with permission from WWII: A Chronicle of Soldiering by James Jones, published by the University of Chicago Press.
- The San Francisco Chronicle called it "choppy and flawed," CNN "a bizarre failure."
- Rather, it offers readers “a chronicle of everyday life, and the narratives which define it.”
- One video that contains the searing truth about guns is the one made by the Rochester Democrat & Chronicle.
- Without the use of these actions most of the advances we are about to chronicle would not have been effected.
- It becomes the duty of the historian of the Portsmouth Road to chronicle these things, but here duty and inclination part company.
- Under that first stone there were deposited a number of coins, two scrolls, and one newspaper—the Preston Chronicle.
- The succeeding pages of this book contain the chronicle of the nine delightful months that followed my departure from America.
- As Mr. Harwood is to appear frequently in this chronicle, it may be well to summarize briefly the facts of his history.