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marcel

/mahr-sel/US // mɑrˈsɛl //UK // (mɑːˈsɛl) //

马塞尔,马塞,马歇尔

Definitions

v.有主动词 verb
  1. 1

    mar·celled, mar·cel·ling.

    • : to wave by means of special irons, producing the effect of regular, continuous waves .
n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : a marcelling.
    • : a marcelled condition.

Examples

  • The holding company also launched “Publicis Schooling,” a series of virtual classes for pre-kindergarten to high school aged children, taught by Publicis Groupe employees using the holding company’s AI platform, Marcel, to connect.

  • Marcel the elephant takes readers on a journey through his life, recounting his memories full of travel and adventure.

  • The priest for the Creole ceremony was Father Marcel Saint Jean.

  • That August, she and Camp co-wrote the first Marcel the Shell video.

  • She saw herself as part of a larger tradition that includes Honore de Balzac, Leo Tolstoy, Marcel Proust, and Thomas Mann.

  • The third group came in the 1930s because of Adolf Hitler: Anni Albers, Ruth Adler Schnee, Marcel Breuer.

  • Explanations were difficult, but were accomplished during supper, and next day Marcel and Schaunard agreed to live together.

  • He lived and died in the house of his sister, in the fields just beyond Porte Saint-Marcel.

  • "There is one thing that both of us must bear in mind, Lieutenant Melville," said Marcel, presently.

  • Marcel had a sprightly humor, and one could never tell how it was going to show itself.

  • We shook up our horses, and they trotted forward, Marcel and I assuming an air of ease and indifference.