diva 的定义
plural di·vas, di·ve [dee-ve]. /ˈdi vɛ/.
- a distinguished female singer; prima donna.
diva 近义词
prima donna
diva 的近义词 3 个
更多diva例句
- Workers who come in direct contact with performers need an even temperament and a long fuse, always at the ready to soothe diva behavior.
- When people say Jennifer Lopez is a diva in 2021, they mean that she’s an icon, a goddess.
- She had worked as a beautician since high school, first at flagship boutiques in the city and later for the disco diva Carol Douglas and on the sets of Spike Lee films.
- He kept getting traded, his numbers weren’t all too flashy, he seemed like a diva … funny how winning can change all of that.
- At this lively club, drag queen divas perform on a nightly basis.
- People scream, the orchestra stops playing, and the stage manager whisks the diva into the wings.
- “She not only won the biggest singing competition in the world, her song “Diva” became a trans anthem,” said Kallai.
- On the fashion shoot beforehand, he was puppyish energy and charm—no diva-ishness, just fast, funny, and co-operative.
- But for true diva status, you need to hurl a phone at an assistant (Naomi Campbell).
- Brutally, Ms. Grande, to be a true diva you need to have lived a bit.
- From a distance came the divine notes of the diva uplifted in some passionate love song.
- When a diva who looks like a hippo surprises us by singing like a canary—that is something remarkable.
- Her delivery of 'Casta Diva' is a transcendent effort of vocalization.
- To me her scales and exercises sounded more entrancing than any diva's rendering of masterpieces, I think.
- We went to the new diva, who did not await our coming, but stepped towards us, with both hands extended.