semester

[sɪˈmestə(r)] [sɪˈmestər]
  • 复数:semesters;
  • 例句
    同义词解析
    • 以下这两个名词均有"学期" 的意思
      term和semester作"学期"解时,其主要差别在于使用地区的不同。term多用于英国,semester主要在美国、德国使用。
    英语四级真题
    • In some departments, either the chairman or the director of graduate studies serves for at least the first semester as a new student adviser.
      出自-2016年6月听力原文
    • As a result, their math grades overtook those of the other students by the end of the first semester—and the gap between the two groups continued to widen during the two years we followed them.
      出自-2016年12月阅读原文
    • They're also expensive, especially when you factor in the average college student's limited budget, typically costing hundreds of dollars every semester.
      出自-2013年6月阅读原文
    • The biggest problem with traditional print textbooks is that they cost hundreds of dollars every semester.
      出自-2013年6月阅读原文
    • they cost hundreds of dollars every semester.
      出自-2013年6月阅读原文
    • An Indiana University study found that interracial roommates were three times as likely as two white roommates to no longer live together by the end of the semester.
      出自-2011年6月阅读原文
    • The name Jill Watson will, of course, change to something else next semester.
      2019年12月四级真题(第二套)阅读 Section C
    英语六级真题
    • on average, only 12 to 14 hours a week studying and many were skating through their semesters without doing a significant amount of reading and writing.
      出自-2015年12月阅读原文
    • One of five students arrives at college today with Advanced Placement (AP) credits amounting to a semester or more of college level work.
      出自-2012年6月阅读原文
    • They at the college dorms at the end of the semester.
      出自-2012年6月听力原文
    • There're also one or two rapes on campus every semester.
      出自-2011年6月听力原文
    • For example, in research with 3920 college students, Doctor Snyder and his colleagues found that the level of hope among freshmen at the beginning of their first semester was a more accurate predictor of their college grades, than were their SAT scores or their grade point averages in high school, the two measures most commonly used to predict college performance.
      出自-2010年12月听力原文
    柯林斯高阶英汉双解学习词典释义
    • N-COUNT
      (某些国家中学院及大学的)学期,半学年
      In colleges and universities in some countries, a semester is one of the two main periods into which the year is divided.
    英汉词典释义
    英英词典释义
    • Noun
      1. one of two divisions of an academic year
      2. half a year; a period of 6 months