柯林斯詞典relic /?r?l?k/ (relics) 1. N-COUNT If you refer to something or someone as a relic of an earlier period, you mean that they belonged to that period but have survived into the present. 遺物; 遺跡 Germany's asylum law is a relic of an era in European history that has passed. 德國的避難法是歐洲歷史上一個(gè)逝去時(shí)代的遺留物。2. N-COUNT A relic is something which was made or used a long time ago and which is kept for its historical significance. 紀(jì)念物 ...a museum of war relics. …一個(gè)戰(zhàn)爭紀(jì)念物博物館。 返回 relic劍橋詞典an object , tradition , or system from the past that continues to exist 遺物;遺跡;遺風(fēng);遺俗 During the dig , the archaeological team found some relics from the Stone Age. 在發(fā)掘過程中,考古隊(duì)發(fā)現(xiàn)了一些石器時(shí)代的遺跡。 The country's employment system is a relic of the 1960s when jobs were scarce . 這個(gè)國家的就業(yè)體制是20世紀(jì)60年代遺留的產(chǎn)物,那時(shí)工作機(jī)會(huì)非常少。 a part of the body or something that belonged to a holy person 圣骨;圣物;圣徒遺物 These bones are the relics of a 12th-century saint . 這些骸骨是一位12世紀(jì)圣徒的圣骨。 返回 relic