fulminate如何读

英:[ˈfʊlmɪneɪt]

美:[ˈfʊlmɪneɪt]

fulminate是什么意思

  • v.大声呵斥;强烈谴责;使爆发
  • n.雷酸盐;雷粉

fulminate自然拼读

ful·mi·nate

fuhl mih neIt

fulminate变形

复数:fulminates

第三人称单数:fulminates

现在分词:fulminating

过去式:fulminated

过去分词:fulminated

fulminate扩展

fulminatory (adj.), fulminator (n.)

fulminate词根

词根:fulminate

adj.

fulminant 暴发的;轰响的;突然闪亮的

n.

fulmination 严词谴责;爆发;爆鸣

fulminate英英释义

Noun

1. a salt or ester of fulminic acid

Verb

1. criticize severely;

"He fulminated against the Republicans' plan to cut Medicare"

"She railed against the bad social policies"

2. come on suddenly and intensely;

"the disease fulminated"

3. cause to explode violently and with loud noise

fulminate词源中文解释

“谴责某人”早于15世纪,“发布‘惊人的’谴责; 向罪犯投掷谴责”的比喻用法,源自拉丁语的 fulminatus,过去分词为 fulminare “投掷闪电、打雷”,比喻地表示“打雷”,源自 fulmen (属格为 fulminis )“闪电”,相关于 fulgor “闪电”, fulgere “闪耀、闪光”,源自原始印欧语言的 *bhleg- “闪耀、闪光”,从基础词根 *bhel- (1) “闪耀、闪光、燃烧”而来。形容词意义(在英语中最古老的)指正式谴责与中世纪拉丁语相似,用于形式化的教会惩罚。相关词汇: Fulminated, fulminating。

fulminate_体育行业词汇

雷汞

fulminate_化学行业词汇

雷酸盐

fulminate_医学行业词汇

暴发:发生突然且极剧烈

fulminate词源英文解释

Verb Middle English, from Medieval Latin fulminatus, past participle of fulminare, from Latin, to strike (of lightning), from fulmin-, fulmen lightning; akin to Latin flagrare to burn — more at black >entry 1 Nounfulminic acid, from Latin fulmin-, fulmen

The first known use of fulminate was in the 15th century

fulminate儿童词典英英释义

fume1 of 2noun

a disagreeable smoke, vapor, or gas—usually used in plural

acid fumes

fume2 of 2verb

to expose to or treat with fumes

to give off fumes

to show bad temper or anger

fumble1 of 2verb

to feel about for or handle something clumsily

fumble2 of 2noun

an act or instance of fumbling

a fumbled ball

fumble1 of 2verb

to feel about for or handle something clumsily

fumble2 of 2noun

an act or instance of fumbling

a fumbled ball

fulsomeadjective

very full or complete

described in fulsome detail

very or overly flattering

praised the boss in fulsome terms

fulsomeadjective

very full or complete

described in fulsome detail

very or overly flattering

praised the boss in fulsome terms

fulsomeadjective

very full or complete

described in fulsome detail

very or overly flattering

praised the boss in fulsome terms

fulminateverb

to utter loud or forceful complaints or strong or violent language

fulminateverb

to utter loud or forceful complaints or strong or violent language

fulminate 例句

1 Its story fulminated, “The close relationship the DNC and mainstream media maintained with Clinton throughout the primaries is comparable to propaganda tactics employed in dictatorships.”

2 This time few are paying attention to the clothes: they’re too busy fulminating over the movie’s other perceived sins.

3 Pundits on the left are fond of reminding us of how Trump storms and fulminates, the White House itself unable to contain his petulance and rage.

4 On his program on Tuesday, the day before the march on the Capitol, for example, Levin fulminated about Congress’s certification of electoral votes for Biden, describing the normally routine vote as an act of “tyranny.”

5 His glimmering dark fantasy world began fulminating in Mexico, where he was born, and continued in San Diego, where his family moved when he was 9.

6 Objective Study why acute and lethal myocarditis fulminate in Keshan disease area in Yunnan.

目的探讨云南省克山病病区急性致死性心肌炎暴发流行及其猝死的原因.

7 At that moment of high drama, one environmental protester in the audience after another got to their feet and began to fulminate about the climate.

8 “This development is disastrous because, intentionally or unintentionally, it serves to reinforce the notion that good English is whatever is popular,” the Times fulminated in an October, 1961, editorial.

9 Or that Wright’s behavior was decidedly gray, not the stark black and white that a fulminating Gingrich made it out to be.

10 According to salvage expert Curt Newport, who recovered Liberty Bell 7 in 1999, the detonator percussion caps that served as a triggering mechanism likely contained mercury fulminate.

11 As the 1980s arrived, the comedy circuit really hit its stride with the likes of Mark Steel and Mark Thomas, and ranting socialist poets such as Attilla the Stockbroker fulminating against policy after Tory policy.

12 Elon Musk has spent months fulminating against diversity, equity, and inclusion and, at times, promoting far-right theories, like The Great Replacement, on his platform X, formerly known as Twitter.

13 Striding around in circles, a woman fulminates silently at something unseen, clapping imploringly at the audience before wandering upstage, looking back as if to provoke, or in shame.

14 He would become red in the face when fulminating about God or Margaret Thatcher, but tempered his antagonism to the former when he started reading about Eastern religions.

15 Then, in late January, a local blogger fulminated after finding her signature among 16,000 names on a two-year-old open letter that decried “apartheid” in Israel and the Palestinian territories.

16 But almost immediately, he purported to discover cards that had been tampered with, prompting him to fulminate, and digress, and comment on his digressions.

17 “I would get stuff on her every day, all this fulminating,” Ms. Mundy said.

18 As well as parody accounts such as @DrSamuelJohson, in which the "gouty lexicographer" with a passion for capitalisation fulminates about modern life, Twitter abounds in literary quotations.

19 Objective: To understand the effect of compound glycyrrhizin on hepatic function of reserve in patients with chronic fulminate hepatitis.

目的:了解复方甘草酸苷对慢性重症肝炎患者肝脏储备功能的影响。

20 It was such an archly conservative stance even back then that Cleveland was most famously opposed by none other than William Jennings Bryan, who went on to fulminate against teaching evolution in the schools.

fulminate 同义词

5 大声斥责

fulminating basting thunder

6 雷酸盐

fulminating compound

8 使轰鸣

roar

11 闪电般闪光

fulgurant

13 严词谴责

fulmination

14 发出巨响

resound

15 叱责

fulmination score

17 呵斥

carpet

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