chronicled 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.
chronicled 近义词
report, recount
更多chronicled例句
- The project will also serve as a definitive chronicle of the history of space exploration, examining how this major milestone was reached and contemplating its implications for the future.
- Plus, since I tend to unnecessarily share these kitchen chronicles on social media, my friends like to get in on the action by sending over their own recipes and ideas.
- A chronicle of the unimaginable toll the pandemic had on restaurants and bars, including how many transformed to survive
- Many of those lessons were painful, a chronicle of misery and loss.
- His harrowing escape from Vienna when Hitler took Austria in March 1938 is dramatically chronicled in his memoirs.
- He returned home a pauper without a pension and 50 years later, at 70, chronicled the travails of the War of Independence.
- And it's that daunting task that is chronicled in Becoming Belle Knox.
- Season one of OITNB chronicled her clumsy, fumbling attempts to get her legs under her so she could run for safety.
- The second siege, chronicled vividly by the poet Amir Khusro, was ferocious.
- Georgie now, to her astonishment, found her movements invariably chronicled in the society journals.
- Reports of the most ridiculous character were duly chronicled as facts by the newspapers of the day.
- Their first three or four days' journeys were without any event worth being chronicled.
- Yet is it here chronicled as a fact, on the authority of trustworthy witnesses, the adventurers themselves.
- It was chronicled, however, in the Icelandic sagas and brought to light by antiquaries of the highest authority.