pinnacle
/ˈpɪnəkl/ (bre, ipa) · [pˈɪnəkəl] /ˈpɪnəkl/ (ame, ipa) · [pˈɪnəkəl] /ˈpi-ni-kəl/ (ame, mw)
pinnacle — 名詞
- pinnaclesingular
- pinnaclesplural
1. the highest and most admired stage of a career, piece of work, or other achievem
巔峰;頂點
成就、事業或發展的最高點
the highest and most admired stage of a career, piece of work, or other achievement
Winning Olympic gold was the pinnacle of Aoi's swimming career.
贏得奧運金牌是 Aoi 游泳生涯的巔峰。
the pinnacle of [someone's] career
Many readers call the novel the pinnacle of modern Japanese fiction.
許多讀者稱這部小說為現代日本小說的頂點。
the pinnacle of + field of art/work
By thirty-two, Rafael had reached the pinnacle of his profession.
Rafael 三十二歲就已經站上事業的巔峰。
The baker said opening her own shop was the pinnacle of years of hard work.
那位麵包師說,能開自己的店,是她多年打拚的巔峰。
For Jessica, conducting at Carnegie Hall felt like the pinnacle of her music career.
對 Jessica 來說,在卡內基音樂廳指揮演出,就像是她音樂生涯的巔峰。
文法句型
the pinnacle of + noun
用法筆記
Almost always singular and preceded by 'the'. Subject of the 'of'-phrase is typically an abstract field (career, achievement, success, art, sport) rather than a physical thing. Strong positive connotation — implies the very top, with little room above.
常見錯誤
2. a narrow pointed part built high on a roof or corner of a building, especially o
尖塔;尖峰
建築上的小尖塔,或岩石的尖頂
a narrow pointed part built high on a roof or corner of a building, especially on an old stone church; it can also mean a sharp rock peak on a mountain
Stone pinnacles rose from each corner of the cathedral roof.
石造尖塔從大教堂屋頂的每個角落聳立而起。
stone pinnacles on cathedral / church roof
Carved pinnacles topped the old church in Prague near the square.
布拉格廣場附近那座老教堂上立著雕花小尖塔。
carved pinnacles + topped + building
Climbers paused on a narrow pinnacle of rock above the valley.
登山者在山谷上方一塊狹窄的岩石尖峰上停下來休息。
Sunlight shone on the gold pinnacle above the old chapel door.
陽光照在老教堂門上方那座金色尖塔上。
用法筆記
Distinguish from sense 1: this sense is concrete and physical, modified by adjectives like 'stone', 'carved', 'narrow', 'rocky'. Often appears in tour-guide writing, architecture history, and mountaineering accounts. The 'of'-phrase, when it appears, names a material (pinnacle of rock) or a building (pinnacle of the cathedral) — not an achievement.