recital 的定义
- a musical entertainment given usually by a single performer or by a performer and one or more accompanists.
- a similar entertainment in a field other than music: a dance recital.
- a program or concert by dance or music students to demonstrate their achievements or progress.
- an act or instance of reciting.
- a formal or public delivery of something memorized.
- a detailed statement.
- an account, narrative, or description: He gave a recital of the things he'd been doing since we'd last seen him.
recital 近义词
narrative, rendering
更多recital例句
- There were levels and evaluations and recitals where we had to play from memory the pieces we’d learned.
- Student recitals have already been streaming on Juilliard’s website, but Juilliard Live also includes live streams and recorded performances from all departments and divisions.
- I always just saw Maybelline mascara in the house, and sometimes she would put it on me for recitals or auditions.
- They’re hosting church services, weddings, graduations, dance recitals, concerts, stand-up comedy.
- It happened late in the day and captured about as much attention as a middle-school band recital.
- By age 4, Condoleezza had already given her first music recital.
- She warbled and wobbled through the recital and was greeted with thunderous applause.
- There is no fear, here—at least not of something as insignificant as a recital.
- He need not stop further study, but whatever else he learns let him at least practise this daily recital for one month.
- He produced a watch and studied it frowningly, then dismissed us and the recital of our troubles with a ponderous gesture.
- She eyed his crafty face narrowly, as she inquired whether there was any news, and listened to his recital of Toby Crackits story.
- More than once the young officer would have cut short the recital, but this Havelock would not permit.
- She is explaining a very sad “histoire” to the “type” next to her, intense in the recital of her woes.