英:[ˈsmɒɡi]
美:[ ˈsmɑːɡi]
英:[ˈsmɒɡi]
美:[ ˈsmɑːɡi]
比较级:smoggier或more smoggy
最高级:smoggiest或most smoggy
词根:smog
n.smog 烟雾
Adjective
1. clouded with a mixture of smoke and fog;
"the smoggy atmosphere of Los Angeles"
"充满或以烟雾为特征的",1905年,来自 smog(n.)+ -y(2)。相关词: Smogginess。
The first known use of smoggy was in 1905
smoke1 of 2noun
the gas of burning materials (as coal, wood, or tobacco) made visible by small particles of carbon floating in it
a mass or column of smoke
something that has little substance or value or that doesn't last very long
something that hides
something to smoke (as a cigarette)
an act of smoking tobacco
smoke2 of 2verb
to give off or exhale smoke
to give off too much smoke
to inhale and exhale the fumes of burning plant material and especially tobacco
to use in smoking
smoke a pipe
to drive away by smoke
to blacken or discolor with smoke
to use smoke to give (as meat or cheese) flavor and keep from spoiling
smoke screennoun
a screen of or as if of smoke to make observation or detection difficult
smokehousenoun
a building where meat or fish is given flavor and kept from spoiling by the use of smoke
smoke1 of 2noun
the gas of burning materials (as coal, wood, or tobacco) made visible by small particles of carbon floating in it
a mass or column of smoke
something that has little substance or value or that doesn't last very long
something that hides
something to smoke (as a cigarette)
an act of smoking tobacco
smoke2 of 2verb
to give off or exhale smoke
to give off too much smoke
to inhale and exhale the fumes of burning plant material and especially tobacco
to use in smoking
smoke a pipe
to drive away by smoke
to blacken or discolor with smoke
to use smoke to give (as meat or cheese) flavor and keep from spoiling
smoke1 of 2noun
the gas of burning materials (as coal, wood, or tobacco) made visible by small particles of carbon floating in it
a mass or column of smoke
something that has little substance or value or that doesn't last very long
something that hides
something to smoke (as a cigarette)
an act of smoking tobacco
smoke2 of 2verb
to give off or exhale smoke
to give off too much smoke
to inhale and exhale the fumes of burning plant material and especially tobacco
to use in smoking
smoke a pipe
to drive away by smoke
to blacken or discolor with smoke
to use smoke to give (as meat or cheese) flavor and keep from spoiling
smognoun
a thick haze caused by the action of sunlight on air polluted especially by smoke and automobile exhaust fumes
smoggyadjective
having a lot of smog
1 A drop in traffic has cleared the capital Santiago’s notoriously smoggy skies but in the south more than 95% of pollution is caused by wood burning for heating, the environment ministry says.
2 Now, on hot, smoggy summer days, visibility can be as little as two miles and never more than thirty.
3 That isn’t the only reason to buy electric, which we were reminded of during a particularly smoggy day last week.
4 I see that smoggy haze of doubt filtering in.
我看到了我需要将疑虑的阴霾过滤干净。
5 Given its smoggy air, aggressive motorists and pervasive lack of respect for traffic laws, Rome isn’t exactly the safest city to traverse on two wheels.
6 It's atmospheric, too, and always slightly smoggy – as if the fires of hell are permanently smouldering somewhere near by.
7 His smirked verses hang over the beat like a smoggy alien sunset, evoking paranoia in paradise, dystopia at the magic hour, an endless summer dissolving into the end of days.
8 The air appears remarkably clear in winter, lacking the smoggy haziness that’s common in summer.
9 We don't know whether he would consider my question about China's smoggy skies as part of the same hand-wringing, anti-car nonsense.
10 Discussions of the idea have already become smoggy from the pollution of American careerist and work-obsessed clichés.
11 Coal, steel, oil - we think of these old-economy industries, and we picture pollution. Smoggy skies, fouled rivers, toxic waste.
煤炭、钢铁、石油——谈到这些传统工业时,我们会想到污染的问题:烟尘、污水、有毒废弃物。
12 The downside of rapid expansion of logging, mining and other resource extraction has been razing of rainforests, pollution of coastal waters and waterways and smoggy cities.
13 Across South America’s most populous city of São Paulo, ground zero of Brazil’s brewing coronavirus crisis, notorious traffic queues and smoggy horizons are also giving way to calm streets and clearer skies.
14 Such high readings are typical in smoggy megacities like Jakarta or New Delhi but rare in New York, where decades of state and federal laws have helped to reduce emissions.
15 Balanced against them was another smoggy family called volatile chemical products, which come from the use of cleaning products, disinfectants and personal care products such as face creams.
16 On the heels of last week's report about pollution in India, today's show takes you to a dangerously smoggy city in Pakistan.
17 I'll be back at the keyboards in about a week — with some art and architectural discoveries from the smoggy capital of Santiago.
18 But on a smoggy day in many cities, it can become opaque, which prevents us from seeing through it past a certain point.
19 We were sitting in my office overlooking Shanghai's financial district one smoggy day.
上海雾霭的一天,我们坐在办公室里,俯瞰着上海金融区。
20 Instead, it was hot and sunny, in a smoggy way, as we searched for one of three World Heritage sites mentioned in every tourism description of the city.