curate 的 2 个定义
- Chiefly British. a member of the clergy employed to assist a rector or vicar.
- any ecclesiastic entrusted with the cure of souls, as a parish priest.
cu·rat·ed, cu·rat·ing.
- to take charge of or organize: to curate a photography show.
- to pull together, sift through, and select for presentation, as music or website content: “We curate our merchandise with a sharp eye for trending fashion,” the store manager explained.
curate 近义词
caretaker
更多curate例句
- The Post can then create audience segments, curate content for them and offer those audiences to advertisers, he said.
- For his blog, Otting teams with his mom to curate each post.
- He pushed past a female curate and raced towards the exit, but Father Andrew Cain got to the doorway first.
- Goppion says he would help planners curate the museum to offer the best art from across the Islamic world.
- And, the moderators attempt to curate the content with the same respect.
- The first stage of his Imago Mundi collection has taken Benetton and his team five years to curate.
- The croupier announces, intoning as does a high-church curate, "There is seven hundred and forty pounds in the bank, gentlemen."
- There is also one curate who has charge of the Indian natives of this city and the slaves and freedmen living within the city.
- She again applied to the curate, who told her, "You have not observed well what the bells said; listen again."
- A poor curate for his Sunday dinner sent his servant to a chandler's shop, kept by one Paul, for bacon and eggs on credit.
- Each day Dr. Ashton did the whole duty; his curate, Mr. Graves, was taking a holiday.