diurnal
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English 5++LDOCE 5++di·ur·nal /daɪˈɜːnəl $ -ˈɜːr-/ adjective technical 1. TMChappening or active in the daytime 白天的;在白昼活动的 OPP nocturnal2. TMChappening every day 每日的,每天的
Examples from the Corpus
diurnal• The plains have a wide range of diurnal and annual temperatures.• diurnal animals such as cows• Several studies on digestion of bone by captive owls and diurnal birds of prey have been published.• Many of the diurnal, or daylight-active species are popular aquarium subjects, but there are also several popular nocturnal species.• Two further categories of incisor digestion can be recognized here, covering all the diurnal raptors.• These differences produce corresponding differences in the bone assemblages produced by owls and diurnal raptors.• Many reptiles have a preferred temperature range within internally regulated diurnal rhythms.• Desert areas on Earth often have wide diurnal temperature ranges due to nighttime radiative cooling through very clear skies.• Figure 1 shows the average diurnal variation of ozone and total peroxide in baseline air for January 1992.• In all three cases, the 17-OHCS are elevated and there is no diurnal variation.Origin diurnal (1300-1400) Latin diurnalis, from dies “day”di·ur·nal adjectiveChineseSyllable
Corpus active daytime the happening or in
diurnal
di‧ur‧nal /daɪˈɜːnəl $ -ˈɜːr-/
adjective technical
OPP nocturnal
2. happening every day
di‧ur‧nal /daɪˈɜːnəl $ -ˈɜːr-/
adjective technical Date: 1300-1400
Language: Latin
Origin: diurnalis, from dies 'day'
1. happening or active in the daytime Language: Latin
Origin: diurnalis, from dies 'day'
OPP nocturnal
2. happening every day