Online Google Dictionary

carol 中文解釋 wordnet sense Collocation Usage Collins Definition
Verb
/ˈkarəl/,
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carols, plural;
  1. Sing Christmas songs or hymns, esp. in a group
    • - we caroled from door to door
  2. Sing or say (something) happily
    • - she was cheerfully caroling the words of the song
Noun
  1. A religious folk song or popular hymn, particularly one associated with Christmas
    • - singing Christmas carols around the tree
    • - a carol service

  1. joyful religious song celebrating the birth of Christ
  2. sing carols; "They went caroling on Christmas Day"
  3. Carol is a 1997 album released by Carol Banawa. In 2000, a re-packaged version was released under Star Records, a recording company owned by ABS-CBN, with three additional tracks.
  4. Ibn Firnas is a lunar impact crater on the far side of the Moon, named after Abbas Ibn Firnas. Attached to the exterior of its southwestern rim is the prominent crater King. Only a few kilometers to the north, separated by a rugged stretch of terrain, is the larger crater Ostwald.
  5. Carol Cerberus is the Pointy-Haired Boss's misanthropic and bitter secretary in the Dilbert comic strip, who feels she is underappreciated and demeaned by her job and therefore takes out her frustration on all employees, especially her boss. ...
  6. A carol is a festive song, generally religious but not necessarily connected with church worship, and often with a dance-like or popular character.
  7. The Price of Salt (1952) is a romance novel by Patricia Highsmith, written under the pseudonym Claire Morgan. ...
  8. The television show Seinfeld was known for featuring many characters, each with their own special quirks.
  9. "Carol" is a song written by Chuck Berry, first released by Chuck Berry in 1958. It was later covered by The Beatles for a live BBC performance during 1963, this version was released on the 1994 compilation album Live at the BBC. ...
  10. Carol is a fictional character from the British television series The Tomorrow People. Her first appearance is in "The Slaves of Jedikiah", and last appears in The Vanishing Earth: Part 4. Carol is portrayed by Sammie Winmill.
  11. A female given name, popular in the middle of the 20th century
  12. A round dance accompanied by singing; A song of joy; A religious song or ballad of joy; To sing in a joyful manner; To sing carols, especially Christmas carols in a group; To praise (someone or something) in or with a song; To sing (a song) cheerfully
  13. an English genre which may have originated as a round dance. Texts could be in English, Latin, or both, and were frequently focussed on a joyful season: Easter, Christmas, or spring. The carol had a burden (the verses) and a refrain; the refrain might add an extra voice part.
  14. The term was derived from a medieval French word, carole, a circle dance. In England it was first associated with pagan songs celegrating the winter solstice. It then developed into a song of praise and celebration, usually for Christmas.
  15. Since the 19th century, generally a song that is in fourpart harmony, simple form, and having to do with the Virgin Mary or Christmas.
  16. a hymn or poem often sung, as at Christmas, by a group, with an individual taking the changing stanzas and the group taking the burden or refrain. Wynkyn de Worde, Caxton's assistant, printed the first collection of carols in 1521. An example is "I Saw Three Ships."
  17. The word’s similarity to choral hints at Latin origin, it was first used in the 14th century. It’s definitions are, in order: an old round dance with singing,  a song of joy or mirth,  and (lastly!) a popular song or ballad of religious joy.
  18. A festival hymn, simple in tune, sung during the Christmas Season. Traditional Episcopalians do not sing carols before sundown on December 24th, and will sing carols right up until Epiphany, at least two weeks after the rest of America has abandoned them.
  19. First and last character seen in the play. Thirteen years old.
  20. in Time for more regulation
  21. a participant in three- and four-party protocols
  22. or Charlie, as a third participant in communications.