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diary

/dahy-uh-ree/US // ˈdaɪ ə ri //UK // (ˈdaɪərɪ) //

日记,日记本,日志,日历

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1

    plural di·a·ries.

    • : a daily record, usually private, especially of the writer's own experiences, observations, feelings, attitudes, etc.
    • : a book for keeping such a record.
    • : a book or pad containing pages marked and arranged in calendar order, in which to note appointments and the like.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • Like an undercover operative, Graham Greene mined his diaries, letters and interviews with misinformation to foil literary snoops.

  • There are other methods of teasing out social connectivity beyond diaries and cellphone data.

  • There are other methods of teasing out social connectivity beyond diaries and cell-phone data.

  • All along, she has made videos at home, which feel like a diary of her pain and endurance.

  • A nice notebook or diary is a great gift for just about anyone.

  • Her experiences are recorded in a prison diary in which she has visions that have significance for the whole community.

  • She and her family arrived in Lebanon on Oct. 17, 2012, at 1:34 p.m.—she marked it in her diary.

  • Here, again, Angleton comes into the picture: In exchange for the diary, he promised Ben and Tony, he would destroy it.

  • In Berlin, Princess Blucher wrote in her diary, “Nothing is talked of but the expected entry into Paris.”

  • In his new book, ‘OZ Diary,’ Zahm explores 10 years of his life and art.

  • My memory is well stored, but unfortunately I have never kept a diary or commonplace book of any kind.

  • Confiding these matters to his "Diary" and keeping his own opinion, Mr. Adams passed on to Philadelphia.

  • This was noticeable in many ways, among others his passion for keeping a diary.

  • About the close of the seventies Tchaikovsky started a new diary, which he kept for about ten years.

  • Things which he never had set down in his diary—things which he did not tell to any one save his few friends.