词汇 | archaeologist |
释义 | archaeologist noun (US alsoarcheologist)uk /ˌɑː.kiˈɒl.ə.dʒɪst/ us /ˌɑːr.kiˈɑː.lə.dʒɪst/ C1 someone who studies the buildings, graves, tools, and other objects of people who lived in the past考古学家 A team of archaeologists are working on a previously undisturbed area of the abbey grounds. She wanted to be an archaeologist and took part in several digs in her youth. Archaeologists have uncovered the remains of an Anglo-Saxon settlement. The site of the temple was discovered by a group of amateur archaeologists. He is an archaeologist who recently excavated an extraordinary Olmec site in Mexico. Archaeology archaeological archaeologically archaeology archeology artefact bluestone carbon dating colosseum conservator dig excavate excavation industrial archaeology osteological osteologist Parthenon ruin sifter uncover unearth Archaeologists also learned that when important people died, their horses were killed. Archaeologists believe there are many more tombs with mummies and treasures to find in the Valley of the Kings. Archaeologists can learn a lot about ancient people from these mummies, too. Archaeologists don’t only learn about people from the treasures they find buried with them. Archaeologists find out a lot from mummies without DNA as well. Archaeologists found several other mummified horses in the area. Archaeologists found the king’s 3,000-year-old mummified body and many amazing treasures in the tomb. Archaeologists learned that some people kept cats just so they could kill them and bury them in tombs. Archaeologists think the silk possibly came from India. Archaeologists think these bog mummies were killed for doing bad things. By studying these animal mummies, archaeologists learned that ancient Egyptians took good care of their pets. In 1991, archaeologists found a mummified body on a mountain in Italy. People around the world were mummified in different ways, but all mummies help archaeologists learn about the past. So, people from Europe were in this part of China much earlier than archaeologists thought before. The archaeologist studies treasures found in tombs. This helped archaeologists learn that these people were European. This tells archaeologists that they were everyday people, not kings and queens. Examples of archaeologistarchaeologist The ability to test hypotheses about cognitive evolution's context is constrained by the archaeologist's ability to precisely reconstruct the specific benefits of a behaviour. Through the 1970s archaeologists debated and refined their understanding of significance through hands-on practical applications in their daily work. From the tools themselves archaeologists can reconstruct a variety of actions: raw material selectivity and procurement, manufacturing sequences, use, and discard. Can we legitimately indict goddess groups when they have simply been following archaeologists, albeit somewhat outdated ones? Traditional, materialist and positivist archaeologists as well as most non-professional interpreters seem to put a greater emphasis on the archaeological remains of a vanished past. The 1970s were the period when the generation of archaeologists educated in the 1960s reached the zenith of their creativity. Archaeologists, even modern-world archaeologists, are a long way from resolving such questions. Probably they perceived my name as belonging to an old archaeologist, who, by chance, had dropped out of their attention. By contrast, our community has an exclusive role to play with regard to another issue, for which only we as archaeologists can bring answers. Fewer archaeologists than ever before are applying for research grants from government agencies. There is a certain complicity between archaeology and modernization: after the archaeologists have done their work, the landscape can be legitimately destroyed. Many archaeologists regarded interest in theory with a certain suspicion, fearing that it might be a flight from the complex practical reality of archaeology. Numerous archaeologists and anthropologists have queried and explored the differences and overlaps between 'foraging' and 'farming' societies - including many important contributions by the present commentators. The culture-bound, ideological-mental dimension of space is also a prominent topic of research for archaeologists studying the cultural landscape. In this respect, the difference between an archaeologist's work and a non-specialist trying to assemble a meaningful past is more quantitative than qualitative. These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors. |
随便看 |
|
反思网英语在线翻译词典收录了377474条英语词汇在线翻译词条,基本涵盖了全部常用英语词汇的中英文双语翻译及用法,是英语学习的有利工具。