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epilogue

/ep-uh-lawg, -log/US // ˈɛp əˌlɔg, -ˌlɒg //UK // (ˈɛpɪˌlɒɡ) //

后记,尾声,后话

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : a concluding part added to a literary work, as a novel.
    • : a speech, usually in verse, delivered by one of the actors after the conclusion of a play.
    • : the person speaking this.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • In the epilogue, Boehner flatly states that he is glad to be out of elective politics given the party’s sharp distancing from its onetime heroes.

  • The epilogue of the book I mentioned earlier, Lights Out, is titled “Jeff Is a Friend.”

  • Then, an epilogue reveals that it’s unclear whether Spears herself received the requests for her participation.

  • By the epilogue they are ferrying high-profile figures like Prince Albert of Monaco to the bottom of the Mediterranean with a matter-of-factness that would have seemed highly improbable, if not entirely impossible, just 10 chapters earlier.

  • My departure to true freedom, just seven months ago, has coincided with the epilogue of the presidential election in the United States, in which I still do not have the right to participate.

  • “The Muslim community is marbled by fear and isolation,” Apuzzo and Goldman write in the epilogue.

  • Maybe this most recent turn of events will give the story an epilogue—and me some peace of mind.

  • What amounts to Breaking Dawn—Part 2 should have been a 15-minute epilogue at the end of that movie.

  • It will also have a new epilogue written by my spouse, Deirdre, who is the one person readers are most curious about.

  • Your arrival there always felt right, like the perfect last phase of your soccer career, so forget about this French epilogue.

  • May this new edition help in the fulfillment of the great purpose which the Gospel epilogue expresses.

  • The little girle is come to act very prettily, and spoke the epilogue most admirably.

  • His introduction (‘An Apologue for an Epilogue’) is full of such outrageous nonsense as to suggest suspicion of his sanity.

  • The epilogue contains an unmeasured invective against these three "vassal slaves of servile Rome."

  • The epilogue as a literary species is almost entirely confined to England, and it does not occur in the earliest English plays.