heyday 的定义
- the stage or period of greatest vigor, strength, success, etc.; prime: the heyday of the vaudeville stars.
- Archaic. high spirits.
heyday 近义词
prime
heyday 的近义词 12 个
heyday 的反义词 4 个
更多heyday例句
- Our tastes, though, both in the consumer-branded heyday of the ’90s and 2000s and now, lend themselves to the delusion of uniqueness.
- They were often found along rocky cliffs and mountains throughout the United States in their heyday of the 1930s and 1940s.
- On Tumblr, the internet’s unofficial home for fandom communities, BTS and its members reign supreme, recalling the vast reach of One Direction in its heyday.
- On the one hand, Bardugo’s original Shadow and Bone trilogy was written in the heyday of hormonal teen fantasy.
- In the heyday of the third-party cookie, no one was interested in first-party data.
- The Rizzoli in New York City was no ordinary bookstore in its seventies heyday.
- I was the kid making a tidy profit burning CDs for all my friends at two bucks a pop back during the Napster heyday in 2000.
- Even a century after his heyday, Houdini has maintained the same mystique he enjoyed while living.
- But in his heyday, no public poll showed him with less than 34 percent support among the American public.
- Big Sugar, advocates say, is employing strategies reminiscent of Big Tobacco in its heyday.
- How different the homeward journey from the intoxicating outward flight, in the heyday of the spring!
- Is it for this that in the heyday of youth I walked with you to the school-house down the road!
- Sternes period of literary activity falls in the sixties, the very heyday of British supremacy in Germany.
- On the two occasions following he was in the very heyday of his mental strength.
- He lived in the heyday of competition, when it seemed utter folly to talk about the end of competition.