other world

其他世界另一个世界其它世界其他的世界

other world 的定义

n. 名词 noun
  1. the world after death; the future world.

other world 近义词

other world

等同于 sempiternity

other world

等同于 eternity

更多other world例句

  1. When it comes to finding fossils of very ancient microbial life — whether on Earth or on other worlds, such as Mars — the odds are just not in our favor.
  2. They’re also talking to other world noise agencies to change laws so that supersonic planes can fly around the globe.
  3. She also illuminates how this crust on the go informs other big questions in science, including the possibility of life on other worlds.
  4. In her memoir, she shares her personal story of finding herself widowed at 40, a suddenly single mother of two young sons, while she explains the science of her search for other worlds.
  5. The only other world leader to have caught the coronavirus while running an election campaign was the Dominican Republic’s Luis Rodolfo Abinader — and he won with 53 percent of the vote in July.
  6. The world that Black Dynamite lives in is not the most PC place to be in.
  7. Have a look at this telling research from Pew on blasphemy and apostasy laws around the world.
  8. Allegations of transphobia are not new in the world of gay online dating.
  9. People watch night soaps because the genre allows them to believe in a world where people just react off their baser instincts.
  10. Editorial and political cartoon pages from throughout the world almost unanimously came to the same conclusion.
  11. Descending the Alps to the east or south into Piedmont, a new world lies around and before you.
  12. All over the world the just claims of organized labor are intermingled with the underground conspiracy of social revolution.
  13. There seems something in that also which I could spare only very reluctantly from a new Bible in the world.
  14. That it is a reasonable and proper thing to ask our statesmen and politicians: what is going to happen to the world?
  15. The "new world" was really found in the wonder-years of the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries.