| 释义 | 
		Definition of diplodocus in English: diplodocusnoun dɪˈplɒdəkəsˌdɪplə(ʊ)ˈdəʊkəsdəˈplɑdəkəs A huge herbivorous dinosaur of the late Jurassic period, with a long slender neck and tail. 梁龙 Genus Diplodocus, infraorder Sauropoda, order Saurischia Example sentencesExamples -  ‘Very large dinosaurs like the diplodocus found in the Algoa Basin took about three decades to reach adulthood,’ says Professor Chinsamy-Turan.
 -  On the ‘dinosaur coast’, near Scarborough, the footprints of a diplodocus show that the sandstone there was laid down 150 million years ago.
 -  Fossils of a previously unknown species, which is believed to have belonged to the herbivorous sauropod diplodocus family, were found along the banks of a tributary of the Amazon river in the northern state of Maranhao.
 -  An aging diplodocus (voice of Joan Plowright) and triceratops spout sage wisdom.
 -  A simpler way would be to trace the tattoo on his arm: an outline of a diplodocus, the world's longest dinosaur.
 -  The neighbouring Museum of Natural History has the third-largest dinosaur collection in the world, including skeletons of tyrannosaurus rex, diplodocus and stegosaurus.
 -  ‘Bronty’ the Brontosaurus was similar to his cousin the diplodocus, only bigger and fatter.
 -  Dr Manning believes the skeleton will inspire youngsters just as he was inspired by the skeleton of the diplodocus at the Natural History Museum, London, when he was seven years old.
 -  They found embedded in solid rock what they believe to be the pelvis of a primitive sauropod, a four-legged, plant-eating dinosaur similar to better-known creatures such as brachiosaurus and diplodocus.
 -  Producing effects that manifested Iannucci's remarkable flights of comedy fantasy must, at times, have proved just as taxing for them as animating a diplodocus.
 -  Diplodocuses were the biggest dinosaurs but not the heaviest.
 -  She seems to belong to another world, like a diplodocus, and I feel oddly privileged to glimpse her before she becomes extinct.
 
 
 OriginModern Latin, from diplo- 'double' + Greek dokos 'wooden beam'.    Definition of diplodocus in US English: diplodocusnoundəˈplädəkəsdəˈplɑdəkəs A huge herbivorous dinosaur of the late Jurassic period, with a long slender neck and tail. 梁龙 Genus Diplodocus, infraorder Sauropoda, order Saurischia Example sentencesExamples -  Fossils of a previously unknown species, which is believed to have belonged to the herbivorous sauropod diplodocus family, were found along the banks of a tributary of the Amazon river in the northern state of Maranhao.
 -  They found embedded in solid rock what they believe to be the pelvis of a primitive sauropod, a four-legged, plant-eating dinosaur similar to better-known creatures such as brachiosaurus and diplodocus.
 -  The neighbouring Museum of Natural History has the third-largest dinosaur collection in the world, including skeletons of tyrannosaurus rex, diplodocus and stegosaurus.
 -  Dr Manning believes the skeleton will inspire youngsters just as he was inspired by the skeleton of the diplodocus at the Natural History Museum, London, when he was seven years old.
 -  ‘Very large dinosaurs like the diplodocus found in the Algoa Basin took about three decades to reach adulthood,’ says Professor Chinsamy-Turan.
 -  ‘Bronty’ the Brontosaurus was similar to his cousin the diplodocus, only bigger and fatter.
 -  On the ‘dinosaur coast’, near Scarborough, the footprints of a diplodocus show that the sandstone there was laid down 150 million years ago.
 -  An aging diplodocus (voice of Joan Plowright) and triceratops spout sage wisdom.
 -  Producing effects that manifested Iannucci's remarkable flights of comedy fantasy must, at times, have proved just as taxing for them as animating a diplodocus.
 -  Diplodocuses were the biggest dinosaurs but not the heaviest.
 -  A simpler way would be to trace the tattoo on his arm: an outline of a diplodocus, the world's longest dinosaur.
 -  She seems to belong to another world, like a diplodocus, and I feel oddly privileged to glimpse her before she becomes extinct.
 
 
 OriginModern Latin, from diplo- ‘double’ + Greek dokos ‘wooden beam’.     |