mozart
mozart — 名詞
1. an Austrian musician and composer who lived in the 1700s and is known for creati
莫札特
奧地利古典音樂作曲家
an Austrian musician and composer who lived in the 1700s and is known for creating some of the most famous works of classical music, including operas such as The Marriage of Figaro, symphonies, and concertos; he was a child prodigy who began composing music at age five.
Lotte's piano teacher played a recording of Mozart's Piano Sonata No. 16 during the lesson.
Lotte 的鋼琴老師在課堂上播放了莫札特第十六號鋼琴奏鳴曲的錄音。
possessive: Mozart's + work title
Mozart wrote over six hundred pieces of music before dying at age thirty-five.
莫札特在三十五歲逝世前總共創作了超過六百首樂曲。
The orchestra performed a Mozart violin concerto that the audience had requested many times.
樂團演奏了一首觀眾多次要求的莫札特小提琴協奏曲。
Sumin's music class studied an opera by Mozart called The Magic Flute.
Sumin 的音樂課研讀了一齣莫札特的歌劇《魔笛》。
文法句型
used as a proper noun without article
用法筆記
In English, the composer is normally referred to by his surname alone — Mr. Mozart would sound unnatural. His complete name, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, is used only in formal biographical contexts or for emphasis.
常見錯誤
2. a person, especially a young one, who shows an extraordinary level of natural ta
天才;神童
比喻天賦異稟的人
a person, especially a young one, who shows an extraordinary level of natural talent or genius, used when comparing someone to the famous composer — for example, calling a gifted young pianist a Mozart of our time.
At age seven, the girl was already called a Mozart by music critics across Europe.
這個女孩年僅七歲時,就被歐洲樂評人稱為莫札特再世。
countable use: a + Mozart
Rafael built a website at age ten and was called a modern-day Mozart of programming.
Rafael 十歲時建立了自己的網站,被譽為電腦程式設計界的現代莫札特。
modern-day + Mozart
The local newspaper called the young pianist a little Mozart after her first public concert.
當地報紙稱這位年輕的鋼琴家為小莫札特,因為她的第一場公開音樂會表現出色。
Sports writers called the teenage tennis player a Mozart of the court.
體育記者稱這位青少年網球選手為網球場上的莫札特。
文法句型
a + Mozart
modern-day + Mozart
用法筆記
This figurative use draws on Mozart's identity as a famous child prodigy. It is most natural with a modifier (a young Mozart, a modern-day Mozart) and in informal or journalistic writing. The phrase Mozart effect, by contrast, refers to a different concept: the disputed idea that listening to Mozart's music improves brain function.