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op

/op/US // ɒp //

启,启启,启幕,启封

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : op art.

Examples

  • Gays have won, Mr. Barron said in his op-ed for the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, and Christians are now “outlaws” and “martyrs.”

  • Judie Brown, president of American Life League, penned an op-ed blasting the “obvious erection.”

  • Bowman had just written an op-ed for TheWashington Post detailing alleged sexual assaults by Cosby in the mid-1980s.

  • He did not tell his family until shortly before the op-ed came out.

  • Jonathan Merritt, a popular religion writer, recently raised this question in an op-ed for The Week.

  • The Waltz without opus number and the Sonata, Op. 4, are likewise posthumous publications.

  • Speaking of the introduction to the Variations, Op. 2, he says: "The composer pretends to be going to work out the theme."

  • The twelfth study of Op. 10 (composed in September, 1831) invalidates all she says about fire, passion, and rushing torrents.

  • The A flat major Polonaise (Op. 53), for instance, he could not thunder forth in the way we are accustomed to hear it.

  • That the composer dedicated to her his Allegro de Concert, Op. 46, may be regarded as a mark of his love and esteem for her.