Skip to main content

timothy

/tim-uh-thee/US // ˈtɪm ə θi //UK // (ˈtɪməθɪ) //

提摩太,提摩西,提摩太后

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1

    plural tim·o·thies.

    • : a coarse grass, Phleum pratense, having cylindrical spikes, used as fodder.

Examples

  • I was shocked to find out from Chief Timothy Longo that Canevari had given me the wrong information.

  • A uniformed cop, 25-year-old Police Officer Timothy Donohue, arrives.

  • The announcement names his parents, Wanda and Timothy, and hers, Katharine and Charles.

  • She was friendly with Timothy Leary, with whom allegedly she dropped acid.

  • Klocker says he was bitter and would compare himself to such persecuted gurus as Timothy Leary and Wilhelm Reich.

  • The Rev. Timothy soon let his pipe go out, and succumbed as his wife had done, for he had worked hard and eaten well.

  • Now, when I am called upon to produce a laugh from Timothy, I no longer make faces or "pop."

  • He looked hard at Timothy Maloney, and the clergyman looked hard at him.

  • He excluded hay fever by the lack of any reaction when timothy extract was dropped into the eye.

  • As he finds rag weed more toxic than the English timothy, his actual first dose is one-half of this theoretical dose.