Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional virtues - Celebrate English

Celebrate English

Celebrate in English as follows:

Celebrate.

Verb (abbreviation of verb) celebrates; Celebrate; Holding religious ceremonies (especially the Eucharist); Praise; Praise; praise

The third person singular: celebrate the present participle: celebrate the past tense: celebrate the past participle: celebrate D.

Memory skills: celerhohonor+ate verb → celebrate when you get honor → celebrate.

Phrase collocation:

Celebrate the Spring Festival in spring.

Celebrate

Celebrate the wedding; Celebrate marriage

Celebrate together and have fun together.

Celebrate the new year.

glee feast

Word usage

(verb)

The basic meaning of celebration refers to "celebration" or "commemoration" (singing, dancing, giving a banquet or giving a speech, etc. Held for religious, political or other meaningful reasons, it focuses on external or action joy and celebration, and can be extended to "praise".

Celebration is often used as a transitive verb, with words of joy, victory, success or similar nature as the object, and it is not allowed to pick up people or bring that clause.

Celebration can also be used as an intransitive verb, meaning "celebrate" or "have fun". This is a colloquial way to explain "happiness".

Extended data:

Synonym for celebration

Commemorative English [k? mem? re? T] beauty [k? mem? re? t]?

Commemorate (with …); As a souvenir of ...

Third person singular: memorial present participle: memorial?

Past tense: commented past participle: commented

Memory skills: com reinforcement +memor memory; Remember the verb +ate → to commemorate.

Example: some? Gallery? Commemoration? Donors? By who? Engraving Their? Name? Open? That? Walls. ?

Some art galleries carve the donor's name on the wall as a souvenir.