spectator 的定义
- a person who looks on or watches; onlooker; observer.
- a person who is present at and views a spectacle, display, or the like; member of an audience.
- Also called spectator shoe . a white shoe with a perforated wing tip and back trim, traditionally of dark brown, dark blue, or black but sometimes of a lighter color.
spectator 近义词
person who watches event
更多spectator例句
- He said over the next several years it drew more and more race participants and spectators.
- They’re skillfully adapting some of the devices honed in live performance over the years — namely, techniques to break the fourth wall and lure spectators into the show.
- Even so, being a spectator of this process is extremely exciting.
- Employees at Capital One can mix with clients and senior leaders at cultural and spectator sporting events, in fitness classes, and at lunches.
- The findings indicate that acorn woodpeckers are willing to invest an impressive amount of time and energy in these power struggles, whether they are warriors or spectators.
- Boos came from some of the families and friends in the spectator seats.
- These days, authoritative feminist discourse is no longer just a spectator sport.
- He breaks down the divide between himself, as performer, and the fan, as spectator.
- Then one daring, possibly planted, spectator interrupted the show to profess her crush.
- “Bill Clinton provided a lot of laughter to me and to The American Spectator,” he said.
- Nor was Mr. Bumbles gloom the only thing calculated to awaken a pleasing melancholy in the bosom of a spectator.
- Old Warrender would lean on his daisy-spud a pleased spectator of the Arcadian scene.
- From that day he must consider himself cut off from human beings, active life; he no longer lives—he is the spectator of life.
- His face was, moreover, mottled with dusky spots, so that he reminded the spectator of a frog or a toad.
- Happily in the pages of the ‘Tatler’ and ‘Spectator’ there is stored up for us the best and rarest of that quiet wisdom.