英:[dɪf'ju:snəs]
美:[dɪf'jusnəs]
英:[dɪf'ju:snəs]
美:[dɪf'jusnəs]
词根:diffuse
adj.diffuse 弥漫的;散开的
diffused 散布的,扩散的;普及的
diffusive 普及的;散布性的;冗长的
adv.diffusely 广泛地;扩散地
n.diffusion 扩散,传播;[光] 漫射
diffuser [机] 扩散器;散布者
diffusor 扩散器;散布者;扩散体
v.diffused 散布,传播(diffuse的过去分词);使分散
vi.diffuse 传播;四散
vt.diffuse 扩散;传播;漫射
adjective
being at once verbose and ill-organized
a diffuse report from the scene of the earthquake
not concentrated or localized diffuse sclerosis
diffuse lighting
verb
transitive verb
to pour out and permit or cause to spread freely
a drop of blue dye diffused in a glass of water
extend, scatter
diffusing their ideas throughout the continent
to spread thinly or wastefully
a government in which power is diffused
physics to subject to diffusion (see diffusion sense 3)especially: to break up and distribute (incident light) by reflection
put up a screen to diffuse the light
intransitive verb
to spread out or become transmitted especially by contact
The civilization diffused westward.
to undergo diffusion
heat from the radiator diffusing throughout the room
Adjective Middle English, "dispersed, verbose (of speech or writing)," borrowed from Middle French & Latin; Middle French diffus, borrowed from Latin diffūsus "spread over a wide area, (of writing) extensive, verbose," from past participle of diffundere "to pour out over a wide surface, spread, extend, squander" — more at diffuse >entry 2 Verb Middle English, in past participle diffusid, borrowed from Latin diffūsus, past participle of diffundere "to pour out over a wide surface, spread out, extend, squander," from dif-, assimilated form of dis- dis- + fundere "to pour, shed" — more at found >entry 5
The first known use of diffuse was in the 15th century
diffusionnoun
a diffusing or a being diffused
the mixing of particles of liquids, gases, or solids so that they move from a region of high concentration to one of lower concentration
the scattering of light by reflection from a rough surface or by passage through a translucent material (as frosted glass)
diffuse1 of 2adjective
using too many words : verbose
a diffuse writer
poured or spread out : not concentrated
diffuse daylight
diffuse2 of 2verb
to pour out and permit or cause to spread freely
to go through or cause to go through diffusion
diffuse1 of 2adjective
using too many words : verbose
a diffuse writer
poured or spread out : not concentrated
diffuse daylight
diffuse2 of 2verb
to pour out and permit or cause to spread freely
to go through or cause to go through diffusion
diffuse1 of 2adjective
using too many words : verbose
a diffuse writer
poured or spread out : not concentrated
diffuse daylight
diffuse2 of 2verb
to pour out and permit or cause to spread freely
to go through or cause to go through diffusion
1 His musical composition matches the tautness of the novel, and what he calls its "almost total lack of diffuseness".
他的作曲完全契合了这部小说紧凑的风格。
2 The production’s diffuseness is partly deliberate, I think.
3 The heat was diffused throughout the room.
4 It captures our own appetite for a public reckoning about abusive men, tempered by our discomfort with the medium, its diffuseness and anonymity, and the nature of a small minority of the accusations.
5 As she weighs maternity, Heti’s narrator laments the pressures on women to have children, but what’s notable is the diffuseness of these pressures in this particular woman’s life.
6 But variations are a good medium for Eschenbach, who likes to examine music’s individual moments and who is good at highlighting drama, and the result, diffuseness and all, was generally agreeable.
7 There existing out-fields in the solution, the dynamic equation of solute diffuseness in the solution is deduced from the lattice theory of liquid quasi-crystalline structure.
从液体似晶结构的“格子”理论出发,推导了有外场存在情况下溶液溶质扩散转移的动力学方程。
8 His diffuseness and the antiquated character of his matter and diction, have, however, come to be regarded as difficulties in the way of study, and he is more renowned than read.
9 This would in part account for the diffuseness which characterises "The Portrait of St. Paul."
10 Bach's processes of revision so far mentioned, however, merely correct faults of form, that is, diffuseness or incomplete development of a musical thought.
11 But the play’s episodic structure creates diffuseness, certain plot twists are strained, some psychological epiphanies are too tidy, and the narrative treads an uneasy tightrope between realism and symbolism.
12 The special bent of his mind in early years, and his love for study rather than sport, are shown in the following reminiscence of his youth, which he narrates with his characteristic diffuseness.
13 But in contrast to the diffuseness of the Americans the French are distinguished by a brevity characteristic of their language.
14 Though not entirely free from the diffuseness and repetition of age, it is nearer free than many respectable books of much younger men, while in faithfulness, patience and, on the whole, discrimination, it surpasses most.
15 There is no want in him, either, of that power of epigrammatic terseness, which, in spite of its diffuseness, his age valued and cultivated.
16 With some diffuseness, he is usually clear and animated.
17 This amplification is produced partly by the importation of incidents and episodes from other works, but still more by indulging in constant diffuseness and what we must perhaps call commonplaces.
18 The functions of their diffuseness, orientation, agglomeration, catalyzer and controls are indispensable factors of science development.
其传播功能 、 导向功能 、 凝聚功能 、 催化功能和控制功能等等是科学事业发展中必不可少的重要因素.
19 Again and again during that night did I wonder at my own diffuseness—again and again did I curse the prolix accuracy of a description that cost such labour to reiterate.
20 Do they express themselves upon the weightiest subject considerately and with lawyerlike diffuseness, or on the most frivolous subject frivolously?
1 普及
widespread pervasive all-pervasive diffusive down-market all-pervading spread popularity diffusion popularization permeation prevail diffuse permeate generalize familiarize popularize universalize
3 冗赘