comet
comet — 名詞
1. A comet is a frozen ball of dust that circles the Sun. When the Sun warms its su
彗星
繞日運行的冰塵天體,近太陽時產生長尾
A comet is a frozen ball of dust that circles the Sun. When the Sun warms its surface, the ice turns to gas and creates a long bright tail.
Last night, Yara and her father watched a bright comet through their backyard telescope.
昨晚 Yara 和父親透過後院望遠鏡看到一顆明亮的彗星。
collocation: bright comet + watched through telescope
The old book contained drawings of a comet that appeared in the year 1066.
那本舊書裡畫著一顆在西元1066年出現的彗星。
comet + appeared in [year] — historical record pattern
Scientists predict the comet will be visible from Earth again in the year 2085.
科學家預測這顆彗星要到西元2085年才會再次從地球可見。
A small telescope is enough to see the glowing tail of a passing comet.
用一台小型望遠鏡就足以看見掠過彗星那發光的尾巴。
Leila's science project showed how a comet's tail always points away from the Sun.
Leila 的科學專題報告展示了彗星尾部總是背向太陽。
文法句型
comet + verb (appears, passes, orbits, develops)
用法筆記
Distinguish from 'asteroid': a comet is mainly ice and dust and develops a visible tail near the Sun, while an asteroid is mainly rock or metal and does not produce a tail. The word is countable — you can say 'a comet', 'two comets', 'the comet'.