watershed
noun /ˈwɔːtəʃed/
/ˈwɔːtərʃed/
- [countable] watershed (in something) an event or a period of time that marks an important change
转折点,分界线,分水岭(标志着重大变化的事件或时期) - The middle decades of the 19th century marked a watershed in Russia's history.
19 世纪中叶标志着俄国历史的转折点。
- The 19th century marked a watershed between the country's agricultural past and its industrial future.
19 世纪是该国从农业国走向工业国的转折点。 - The completion of this project was a watershed event in the company's history.
完成这个项目是公司历史上的里程碑事件。 - The granting of the vote represented a watershed for the rights of women.
获得选举权是女性争取权利的重要一步。 - With the strike, a historical watershed in the development of the trade union movement was reached.
这次罢工使工会运动发展到了一个历史转折点。 - a watershed moment in recent music history
近代音乐史的转折时刻 - a watershed year for Japan
对日本而言具有转折意义的一年
Collocations Dictionaryadjective- historic
- important
- major
- …
- be
- mark
- represent
- …
- divide something
- moment
- event
- year
- …
- watershed between
- watershed for
- watershed in
- …
- The middle decades of the 19th century marked a watershed in Russia's history.
- [countable] a line of high land where streams on one side flow into one river, and streams on the other side flow into a different river
分水线;分水岭;分水界 - the watershed[singular] (in the UK) the time before which programmes that are not considered suitable for children may not be shown on television
(英国)儿童不宜节目可在电视上播放的起始时间 - the 9 o’clock watershed
可开播儿童不宜电视节目的晚上 9 点钟时限
- the 9 o’clock watershed
词源early 19th cent.: from water + shed in the sense ‘ridge of high ground’ (related to the verb shed), suggested by German Wasserscheide.