英:['straɪkɪŋlɪ]
美:['straɪkɪŋlɪ]
英:['straɪkɪŋlɪ]
美:['straɪkɪŋlɪ]
词根:striking
adj.striking 显著的,突出的,惊人的;打击的;罢工的
v.striking 打(strike的ing形式)
Adverb
1. in a striking manner;
"this was strikingly demonstrated"
"the evidence was strikingly absent"
The first known use of striking was in 1725
string1 of 3noun
a cord usually used to fasten or tie
a thin tough plant structure (as the fiber connecting the halves of a bean pod)
the gut, wire, or nylon cord of a musical instrument that is plucked, bowed, or struck to produce a sound
plural the stringed instruments of an orchestra
the gut, wire, or cord of a racket or shooting bow
a group of objects threaded on a string
a string of pearls
a series of things arranged in or as if in a line
a string of automobiles
a series of like items (as units of information, marks, or words)
the animals and especially horses belonging to or used by one individual
any of several squads of players on a team that are grouped together according to skill
the second string of a football team
a series in time : succession, sequence
plural requirements or obligations connected with something
an agreement with no strings attached
string2 of 3verb
to equip (as a tennis racket) with strings
to thread on or as if on a string
string beads
to tie, hang, or fasten with string
to hang by the neck
strung up from a high tree
to remove the strings of
string beans
to extend or stretch like a string
string wires from tree to tree
to set out in a line or series
string3 of 3adjective
of or relating to stringed musical instruments
the string section of an orchestra
stringyadjective
containing, consisting of, or resembling string stringy hair
stringy cheese
stringernoun
one that strings
a long piece of wood or metal used for support or strengthening in a building (as under a floor)
stringentadjective
tying, drawing, or pressing tight
strict in setting standards or following rules
stringent training
stringentadjective
tying, drawing, or pressing tight
strict in setting standards or following rules
stringent training
strikingadjective
attracting attention : remarkable, impressive a striking resemblance
a striking costume
1 He no longer plays those gloomy songs, but keeps them on a shelf, he explained, at the end of a memoir that was strikingly life-affirming for all the sad strands it contained.
2 Motion said that while he was a huge admirer of Mitchell, this novel was simply not "as strikingly done as his previous books".
3 Its primary function is to malapportion political power, and it does so — indeed, has always done so — with strikingly awful consequences.
4 Four years later Sam Tanenhaus, writing in The New York Times Magazine, characterized Mr. Wieseltier’s mop as not merely “strikingly white” and “luxuriant” but “well, leonine.”
5 He had extraordinary stamina, and was also strikingly small at just 14 hands.
6 Then sweetness gave way to some of the 31-year-old singer-songwriter's toughest, if strikingly poetic, lyrics about her trademark theme: trying to hang onto body and soul in the face of relentless loss and illusion.
7 It’s just that the climax of the first act, and the opening minutes of the second, give the show a jolt of emotional currency that contrasts strikingly with its nostalgic spirit.
8 It was paradoxically both “simple” and “hard” at the same time, appealing and instantly recognizable, yet also strikingly difficult to penetrate and comprehend.
9 Whether it will work politically, it was a strikingly dramatic, emotional moment for a State of the Union address.
10 Her characters are quickly established, fully dimensional and strikingly varied in appearance, carriage and accent.
11 The history of writing illustrates strikingly the similar ways in which geography and ecology influenced the spread of human inventions.
12 The front of last year’s debut from Broken Bells — a single image of a pinkish ball that looks made of papier-mâché — is strikingly direct.
13 But oddly enough, Steve and Alfonso get into the fight that earns him a scarred forehead in the “Champion” episode; two episodes later, in “Paradise,” Homer gets a strikingly similar scar.
14 We found that, by taking this new approach, health disparities among seniors became strikingly clear.
15 Possessing a strikingly pellucid tone, Fort was at her most arresting on her longest pieces, the power ballad "Minnesota," the quicksilver soundscape "Some" and particularly the picaresque "Something 'Bout Camels."
16 Some of those letters had documented strikingly similar symptoms to this man.
17 The Knight is exuberant and brilliant – literally brilliant, with its vivid red-orange keynotes: nothing could contrast more strikingly with Guthrie's brooding, smoky, khaki palette.
18 And “Snowden” is, by Mr. Stone’s standards, a strikingly sober film.
19 The hand-to-hand violence is strikingly intense for the period, its realism intensified by Karlson’s use of nonprofessional actors and suffocatingly tight close-ups.
20 Instead of having a blend of African and European ancestry that makes Brazilians black or white or any shade in between, most people in this region look strikingly indigenous.
1 吸引目光
2 醒目地
3 出众
4 明显地
definitely obviously apparently evidently noticeably visibly markedly patently demonstrably manifestly starkly appreciably palpably discernibly
5 明显
strong clear obvious visible plain patent distinct apparent evident manifest striking noticeable definite marked tangible pronounced noteworthy blatant predominant observable palpable glaring emphatic clear-cut appreciable definitely obviously apparently evidently noticeably visibly markedly patently demonstrably manifestly starkly appreciably palpably discernibly obviousness
6 醒目