astronomy
astronomy — 名詞
1. the science that looks at what lies beyond Earth — including stars, planets, moo
天文學
研究宇宙與星體的科學
the science that looks at what lies beyond Earth — including stars, planets, moons, galaxies, and the way the universe formed and changes over time.
Hadiya studied astronomy at university and now works at a planetarium in Tokyo.
Hadiya 大學主修天文學,目前在東京一間天文館工作。
study astronomy at + [institution]
Modern astronomy uses huge telescopes to see stars billions of miles from Earth.
現代天文學利用巨型望遠鏡觀測距離地球數十億英里的恆星。
modern astronomy + tools/instruments
Greta has been interested in astronomy since she watched a meteor shower as a child.
Greta 從小看過一次流星雨之後,就一直對天文學很感興趣。
Ancient Egyptian priests used astronomy to predict the flooding of the Nile.
古埃及祭司利用天文學來預測尼羅河的氾濫時間。
The school astronomy club gathers every Friday night to observe the rings of Saturn through their telescope.
學校的天文社每週五晚上聚會,用望遠鏡觀測土星環。
- astrophysics
narrower; focuses on the physics and chemistry of space objects
- cosmology
narrower; specifically the origin and structure of the whole universe
- stargazing
informal; the hobby of looking at stars rather than the academic field
- astrology
often confused with astronomy but is a belief system, not a science
用法筆記
Uncountable noun: never 'an astronomy' or 'astronomies'. Distinguish from astrology, which is the non-scientific belief that stars influence human affairs.