1. an image or representation especially of a person especially a crude figure representing a hated person
2. publicly in the form of an effigy the football coach was burned in effigy
3. an image of a person
effigies 片语
片语
stone effigies of Buddha石雕佛像
Burning Effigies表演者
figurines雕像;雕刻工艺品(figurine的复数形式)
The Burning Effigies表演者
burn effigies of apple products烧苹果产品的相片
A maker of wooden effigies作俑之人
portraits肖像(portrait的复数);画像
burn giant effigies以表示跟前一年的一些倒霉事物
effigies 例句
英汉例句
Locals spend months building the effigies in anticipation of major festivals.
当地人为参加主节日花数月去造雕像。
Since the 14th century, celebrations in these countries have often included huge effigies (up to 3 yards tall) of historical, biblical, and sometimes contemporary figures. And dragons.
自14世纪以来,这些国家经常在庆典中使用巨型历史和圣经人物雕像(达3码高),有时是当代人物和龙。
Though protesters in Greece were known to burn effigies of Ms. Merkel over her harsh austerity policies, she helped impose a measure of discipline among bickering eurozone leaders.
All those fat little monsters, those slablike effigies pasted on the facade of the Eglise St. Michel, they were following me down the crooked lanes and around corners.
With the sky still aglow at 11 p. m. on Midsummer Eve, Danes build bonfires along the shore to burn effigies of witches, banishing evil spirits from the land.
A religious or magical function of dolls is evident in the Heian period (794-1185), when effigies called hitogata or katashiro were used as scapegoats to remove defilement or absorb evil influences.