-
a newspaper or magazine that deals with a particular subject or profession (某学科或行业的)报纸,刊物,杂志 a scientific/an academic journal 科学/学术期刊 the British Medical Journal 《英国医学杂志》 the Journal of Experimental Psychology 实验心理学杂志 a trade/professional/specialist journal 行业/专业/专业杂志 an online journal 在线杂志 a journal article 期刊文章 - in a journal
The results of the study are expected to be published in a peer-reviewed journal next month. 这项研究的结果预计将于下月发表在同行评议的期刊上。
Extra ExamplesTopics Literature and writingb1, TV, radio and newsb1, Scientific researchb1He founded a new literary journal in 1831. 他于 1831 年创办了一份新的文学刊物。 She subscribes to quite a few academic journals. 她订阅了好几种学术期刊。 The journal comes out five times a year. 该刊 1 年出版 5 期。 The paper was published in an obscure medical journal. 这篇论文发表在一份鲜为人知的医学期刊上。 the house journal of Southern Gas 南方燃气公司的内部刊物
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- academic
- learned
- scholarly
- …
- copy
- edition
- issue
- …
- read
- edit
- write for
- …
- come out
- be dedicated to
- be devoted to
- …
- article
- editorial
- editor
- …
- in a/the journal
- journal of
used in the title of some newspapers (用于报纸名)…报 the Wall Street Journal 《华尔街日报》
-
a written record of the things you do, see, etc. every day 日志;日记 He kept a journal of his travels across Asia. 他把自己的亚洲之行记录下来了。 I'm keeping a food journal for a school science project. 我在为一个学校科学项目写一本食品杂志。 Her journal entry for that day describes a thunderstorm. 她在那天的日志中描述了一场雷雨。
Extra ExamplesLady Franklin kept a daily journal of the voyage. 富兰克林夫人坚持每天写航海日志。 The Captain later published his journals. 船长后来发表了自己的日志。 ‘I think we're being bugged’, he wrote in his journal. “我认为我们被窃听了,”他在日记中写道。 Queen Victoria's journal is regarded as an important historical record. 维多利亚女王的日记被视为重要的历史记录。
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- personal
- private
- daily
- …
- keep
- write
- read
- …
- entry
- in a/the journal
- journal of
Word Originlate Middle English (originally denoting a book containing the appointed times of daily prayers): from Old French jurnal, from late Latin diurnalis, from Latin diurnus ‘daily’, from dies ‘day’.