英:[bɒtʃ]
美:[bɑtʃ]
英:[bɒtʃ]
美:[bɑtʃ]
n.
拙劣的工作,笨活
粗拙的补缀
[医](皮肤上的)脓疱
vt.& vi.
粗拙地补缀,修补
笨手笨脚地弄坏
把…搞糟
复数:botches
第三人称单数:botches
现在分词:botching
过去式:botched
过去分词:botched
botcher (n.)
词根:botch
adj.botchy 不精致的;难看的
n.botcher 笨拙的工人;小鲑鱼
transitive verb
to spoil or ruin as a result of clumsy work or poor repairs; bungle.He tried to install the water heater himself, but he botched the job and had to call in a professional.
noun
a clumsy or defective piece of workmanship.
a confused combination; jumble.
14世纪晚期, bocchen “修理”,后来,“拙劣地修理,因不熟练的工作而破坏”(1520年代); 一个起源不明的词。中古英语《Compendium》写道,它可能与 bocchen “肿胀或溃烂; 膨胀或凸出”相同(尽管这只有15世纪初有记录,而 OED 否认有联系),这来自于古北法语 boche,古法语 boce,这是一个不确定起源的常见罗曼语词。相关: Botched; botching。
作为名词,“拙劣完成的部分”,记录于大约1600年,也许来自动词,但请参见中古英语 bocche “疖子,病理性肿胀,肿瘤”(14世纪晚期),尤其是用于鼠疫的腺体肿胀,也比喻为“腐败的人; 腐烂的状态”(14世纪晚期),“跛子的驼峰”(14世纪早期),这可能也来自于古北法语 boche,古法语 boce。
Noun (1) Middle English boche, from Anglo-French, from Vulgar Latin *bottia boss Verb Middle English bocchen
The first known use of botch was in the 14th century
bottom1 of 2noun
the undersurface of something
a supporting surface or part : base
buttock sense 2a, rump
the surface on which a body of water lies
the part of a ship's hull lying below the water
boat entry 1 sense 1, ship
the lowest part, place, or point
the bottom of the page
the part of a garment worn on the lower part of the bodyespecially: the trousers of pajamas —usually used in plural
lowland along a river
the Mississippi River bottoms
the most basic or central part : heart
get to the bottom of the problem
the last half of an inning of baseball
bottom2 of 2verb
to provide a foundation for
to rest on, bring to, or reach the bottom
bottle1 of 2noun
a container (as of glass or plastic) with a narrow neck and mouth and usually no handle
a bag made of skin used to hold a liquid
the quantity held by a bottle
a bottle with a rubber or plastic nipple for feeding an infant
bottle2 of 2verb
to put into a bottle
to shut up as if in a bottle : restrain
bottled up their anger
bottlenecknoun
a narrow passageway
someone or something that holds up progress
a traffic bottleneck
bottle1 of 2noun
a container (as of glass or plastic) with a narrow neck and mouth and usually no handle
a bag made of skin used to hold a liquid
the quantity held by a bottle
a bottle with a rubber or plastic nipple for feeding an infant
bottle2 of 2verb
to put into a bottle
to shut up as if in a bottle : restrain
bottled up their anger
bottle1 of 2noun
a container (as of glass or plastic) with a narrow neck and mouth and usually no handle
a bag made of skin used to hold a liquid
the quantity held by a bottle
a bottle with a rubber or plastic nipple for feeding an infant
bottle2 of 2verb
to put into a bottle
to shut up as if in a bottle : restrain
bottled up their anger
bottle1 of 2noun
a container (as of glass or plastic) with a narrow neck and mouth and usually no handle
a bag made of skin used to hold a liquid
the quantity held by a bottle
a bottle with a rubber or plastic nipple for feeding an infant
bottle2 of 2verb
to put into a bottle
to shut up as if in a bottle : restrain
bottled up their anger
bot1 of 2noun
the larva of a botfly
bot2 of 2noun
robot
a computer program that performs automatic, repetitive, and sometimes harmful tasks
a computer program or character that mimics human actions
bothersomeadjective
causing bother
both1 of 3adjective
the two : the one and the other
both2 of 3pronoun
the one as well as the other
both of us
both3 of 3conjunction
—used before two words or phrases connected with and to stress that each is included
both New York and London
botch1 of 2verb
to make or do something in a clumsy or unskillful way : spoil, bungle
botch2 of 2noun
a botched job : mess
botchnoun
an inflammatory sore
1 A couple of years ago he made and starred in We’ll Never Have Paris, a bouncy, low-budget romcom about a botched marriage proposal.
2 Arizona remained white hot for Orton despite his botch and generally doing very little in the match.
3 I hate having builders botch up repairs on my house.
我痛恨建筑工人笨手笨脚地修理我的房子。
4 “She tried to correct his nose, and it was botched and he got a scar,” Mr. Tyrnauer said.
5 But in this case, as with so many pension machinations in Springfield, political considerations botched the plan.
6 For a moment, I forgot I was watching Lost and thought I was reading pages from a botched manuscript I fished out of Eckhart Tolle's garbage.
7 Just in case listeners couldn’t understand his botched pronunciation, the words were printed below his bright orange face in bright yellow block letters with a translation: “This time Trump government.”
8 Kathryn Johnston, a 92-year-old woman in Atlanta, was relaxing in her home, and police stampeded in like cowboys and killed her in a botched drug raid.
9 Characters die from cholera and measles and smallpox, from shipwrecks and scalpings and botched amputations and occult tortures.
10 To set deaf actors against the backdrop of a story about botched communication is clever, considering the actors use American Sign Language as part of their choreography.
11 Stewart also blames Viacom for botching the chance to sign John Oliver as his replacement before Oliver left for his successful HBO show.
12 In "Aftermath," Noesner is dealing with the fallout of the botched raid, and investigating the growing rise of domestic terrorism in America.
13 And I thought about how we had just botched our good-bye.
14 As Packer put it in his recent collection of essays, Interesting Times: "The press redeemed in Baghdad what it had botched in Washington."
15 The affected cell tries to mend the glitch but often botches the repair.
16 Otherwise, the director of “Takers” botches even the basics of making these many murders frightening.
17 There’s a botched robbery; Jigger escapes unscathed, and Billy dies but later comes back to earth to help his troubled daughter who, at times, is very unlike the sunny Ms. Pollack.
18 Dressed all in black and with an air of sad rebuke, Tsiskaridze poured scorn on Iksanov, accusing him of botching the Bolshoi's reconstruction, ruining its repertoire and treating dancers like slaves.
19 ...a botched job.
拙劣的工作
20 Six months ago, I went to the hospital by ambulance after an outpatient procedure was botched.
1 瘤
neoplasm knurl growth bunch boss node bump knot knob rising nodule outgrowth protuberance excrescence gnarl nodus
3 损伤
traumatic detrimental scathing hurt lesion detriment break damage harm disable diminish prejudice mar snag blemish scathe
4 笨手笨脚地弄糟
5 疮
6 拙劣地修补
7 一团糟
balls-up fuck-up screw-up hash snafu muss foul-up bollocks dog's breakfast higgledy-piggledy turbid helter-skelter muck-up hash-up mash mull Mess-up mux bollix cockup fuckup lash-up mullock janfu piss-up the deuce and all
10 笨拙的补缀
12 混乱
crap confused chaotic turbulent tumultuous rowdy woolly muddled shambolic helter-skelter Rafferty's rules disorder upset chaos melee havoc turmoil tangle turbulence entropy dislocation commotion disarray shambles tumult bewilderment perplexity tailspin babel kerfuffle balls-up confuse jumble put out of joint cock-a-hoop hirdie-girdie fouled-up involved dizzy tangled drowning foggy disturbed disorderly shaggy deranged unstuck haywire hurried snafu vexatious turbid non-operational mixed-up confounded mazy snarly hurly-burly flurried tangly raddled untogether wuzzy farmisht farblonjet drumly throughither muck-up ravelment ballup fubb fumtu hash-up do mix smoke mess dust coil confusion pi jungle hassle disruption scramble clutter swirl tumble hustle maze puddle whirlpool flurry huddle anarchy ruffle twine smother mull perplex muddle snarl crisscross skein cobweb dither mix-up turbidity disorganization muss tousle topsy-turvy welter fubar involution ravel Mess-up unreason pell-mell foul-up dishabille throe bollix cockup moil deray hugger-mugger snarl-up swither mullock ataxy piss-up hurry-scurry schemozzle wander twist disrupt amuse confound bugger entangle embroil denigrate disorganize derange roil disorient discombobulate ballocks fuddle mux disrupture ensnarl embrangle in a spin make hay of stand on its head throw out of gear ball up in a fog make work
15 笨手笨脚地弄坏