pristine 的定义
- having its original purity; uncorrupted or unsullied.
- of or relating to the earliest period or state; primitive.
pristine 近义词
clean, pure; primeval
更多pristine例句
- To weed out possible contamination, Candela and his colleagues sorted out the old, obviously degraded ancient DNA from the more pristine modern sequences.
- The PDK monomers can then be used to make pristine new plastic, again and again.
- Their ball movement was pristine, and perhaps the most impressive part of Michigan’s performance was that star freshman center Hunter Dickinson hardly factored into his team’s success.
- It’s packed with pristine lakes, rivers, and views of the southern Rocky Mountains.
- Sestito speculated that perhaps pockets of pristine gas managed to dodge all the metals expelled from supernovas for eons, then collapsed to form stars that looked deceptively old.
- The grand prize is a pristine white Fiat Panda 4X4 – with full options.
- Today the Stanley is in pristine shape after another series of renovations were completed in 2013.
- There are still places in the sea as pristine as I knew as a child.
- There are always examples of degradation, but there are very few examples of ecosystems left that are that pristine.
- Beauty is often pristine, Harding says, while the word “gorgeous” contains more the idea of extremes and can include decay.
- We have native hearts and virtues, just as other nations; which in their pristine purity are noble, potent, and worthy of example.
- Medicine and religion have been closely associated from the most pristine time.
- Then agriculture will be "restored to right uses" and held in its pristine honor; and the earth will yield its fruits abundantly.
- It was of course the shadow of the Midas statue, which the boys had never permitted to be restored to its pristine state.
- But it is far from being the case that all tribes with this pristine organisation possess identical ceremonies and ideas.