英:['deɪndʒərəslɪ]
美:[ˈdendʒərəslɪ]
英:['deɪndʒərəslɪ]
美:[ˈdendʒərəslɪ]
词根:danger
adj.dangerous 危险的
n.danger 危险;危险物,威胁
dangerousness 危险
Adverb
1. in a dangerous manner;
"he came dangerously close to falling off the ledge"
see danger >entry 1
The first known use of dangerous was in the 15th century
dapple1 of 2noun
any spot or patch of a dappled pattern
a dappled state
a dappled animal (as a horse)
dapple2 of 2verb
to mark or become marked with a dappled pattern
daisies dappled the field
dapperadjective
being neat and trim in dress or appearance : spruce
being alert and lively in movement and manners
daphnianoun
any of a genus of tiny water fleas with antennae used for movement
danseusenoun
a female ballet dancer
danseurnoun
a male ballet dancer
dankadjective
unpleasantly moist or wet
dangleverb
to hang loosely especially with a swinging motion
to be left without proper grammatical connection in a sentence
a dangling participle
to cause to dangle : swing
dangleverb
to hang loosely especially with a swinging motion
to be left without proper grammatical connection in a sentence
a dangling participle
to cause to dangle : swing
dangleverb
to hang loosely especially with a swinging motion
to be left without proper grammatical connection in a sentence
a dangling participle
to cause to dangle : swing
dangerousadjective
exposing to or involving danger
a dangerous mission
able or likely to cause injury
dangerous weapons
1 Every time he knelt the rockets would slide dangerously forward.
每一次他向下跪拜,那些火箭都会令人胆战心惊地向前滑动。
2 The duct creaked dangerously as he squirmed past, protesting the collected weight of himself and the wire.
3 After all, fiction can be dangerously misleading or distracting.
4 Tilting dangerously back and forth, Cole felt himself lifted onto a stretcher and carried up the dock to a waiting van.
5 He leaped from the car while it was still skidding dangerously and hurtled up the flight of steps inside, where three men were busy at the instruments and the controls.
6 What Patterson found was that before 1923 there was almost no lead in the atmosphere, and that since that time its level had climbed steadily and dangerously.
7 Suddenly the exposition seemed dangerously far from ready.
8 The book flies open and swings dangerously at SCORPIUS/HARRT, who has to dodge out of the way.
9 Some of the men were dangerously close to believing they would never get out of the ice at all.
10 In this case, your paging space is starting to get dangerously low.
在这个示例中,分页空间变得很低,以至于可能有危险。
11 He is dangerously ill.
他病得很重。
12 When her long dress flapped dangerously close to the flames, Liyana stooped to pull it back, but Poppy said, “She knows what she’s doing.”
13 I climb dangerously high into a tree, not for safety but to get as far away from today as I can.
14 “Then I choose to live dangerously,” I said.
15 “You should have seen them sitting in that meeting yesterday—” Jean Louise looked up at her uncle, who was balancing himself dangerously on the back legs of his chair.
16 It was as Harry dodged another Bludger, which went spinning dangerously past his head, that it happened.
17 The word "gift" has got dangerously devalued of late.
“礼物”一词近来已被危险地贬值了。
18 More stimulus now would add to an already dangerously high deficit.
现今的大部分经济刺激将增加已然高危的赤字。
19 A coconut dropped dangerously close to her head.
20 “Quite apart from God—though of course God would be a reason for it. Isn’t there something in living dangerously?”
1 危险地
wickedly precariously ominously perilously treacherously seriously alarmingly lethally insecurely riskily
3 极其
awful dreadful ever absolutely plain incredibly thoroughly deadly stiff notably critically hugely desperately wonderfully wildly immensely whopping cracking painfully enormously fiercely blooming abundantly vitally acutely bitterly goddamn fantastically stunningly heartily absurdly fabulously ruthlessly starkly wickedly excruciatingly thundering blindingly astronomically disgustingly inordinately frightfully abysmally whacking diabolically imperatively abominably screamingly walloping damnably killingly devil's own