英:[sək'sɪŋktlɪ]
美:[sək'sɪŋktlɪ]
英:[sək'sɪŋktlɪ]
美:[sək'sɪŋktlɪ]
词根:succinct
adj.succinct 简洁的;简明的;紧身的
n.succinctness 简明,简洁
adjective
marked by compact precise expression without wasted words
a succinct description
being girded
close-fitting
more succinctly更简洁地说
1530年代,来自 succinct + -ly (2)。
Middle English, from Latin succinctus having one's clothes gathered up by a belt, tightly wrapped, concise, from sub- + cinctus, past participle of cingere to gird — more at cincture
The first known use of succinct was in the 15th century
suchlike1 of 2adjective
of like kind : similar
the third suchlike event
suchlike2 of 2pronoun
someone or something of the same sort : a similar person or thing
pencils, pens, and suchlike
such1 of 3adjective
of a kind or character to be indicated or suggested
a coat such as a doctor wears
having a quality already specified
deeply moved by such acts of kindness
so great : so remarkable such courage
such a storm
of the same class, type, or sort : similar
opened three such stores
such2 of 3pronoun
such a person or thing
has a plan if it may be called such
someone or something stated, implied, or exemplified such were the Romans
such was the result
someone or something of the same kind
ships and planes and such
such3 of 3adverb
to such a degree : so
such tall buildings
very entry 2 sense 1
hasn't been in such good spirits lately
succumbverb
to yield to force or pressure
succumb to temptation
die entry 1 sense 1
many of the early settlers succumbed during the winter
succulent1 of 2adjective
full of juice : juicy
succulent cherries
moist and tasty
a succulent meal
having fleshy tissues that conserve moisture
succulent plants
rich in interest
a succulent book
succulent2 of 2noun
a succulent plant (as a cactus or an aloe)
succulent1 of 2adjective
full of juice : juicy
succulent cherries
moist and tasty
a succulent meal
having fleshy tissues that conserve moisture
succulent plants
rich in interest
a succulent book
succulent2 of 2noun
a succulent plant (as a cactus or an aloe)
succulencenoun
the state of being succulent
succotashnoun
lima or shell beans and green corn cooked together
succor1 of 2noun
relief sense 1a
succor2 of 2verb
to go to the aid of (one in need or distress) : relieve
succinctadjective
marked by short concise expression without wasted words
succinctadjective
marked by short concise expression without wasted words
1 Caro makes the same point more succinctly when writing about “The Power Broker,” recalling how he was swept away by the scandalous material he was discovering and an accompanying sense of duty.
2 More succinctly: this was a really bad movie.
3 In 2014, the Washington Post summarized it succinctly like this: "Hipster beers are for Democrats. Lites are for Republicans. And scotch drinkers vote."
4 Ms. Tom put it more succinctly: “I don’t think there’s any shutting us up anymore.”
5 “It was like throwing Michael Phelps in the water,” he said succinctly.
6 This is Mr. Bourne at his best; the necessary outline of events to come, shown through mime in the original, is succinctly and chillingly conveyed.
7 It makes sense that dance scenes frequently go viral: Good film choreography can capture, succinctly and with striking clarity, the essence of a character, relationship or problem.
8 Other spot's repair adopts the sprightly means succinctly the material standard spoken Chinese the work simplification.
其他部位的装修采取简洁、明快的办法,材料普通话,做工简单化.
9 If it does, he would be far from the first member of parliament to try living, as Jarvis Cocker succinctly put it, "like common people".
10 “That never happened to me before,” his partner says later, recalling the episode more graphically and succinctly than I can here.
11 Put succinctly by USA Today, "Paul McCartney penned Blackbird about the Black struggle."
12 Rather, the Bechstein, which is on wheels, has been succinctly violated: a large hole has been cut through its case.
13 MoR's founder and artistic director Mina Miller succinctly describes the work they created as "a searing portrait of a world gone mad."
14 It’s possible to understand what Mr. Hiss is talking about without feeling an urge to read 300 pages that hector us to, as Ram Dass put it more succinctly, be here now.
15 A recent headline puts it succinctly: "First came the DNA kits. Now come the support groups."
16 The reaction to Kardashian's remarks was succinctly summed up by Whoopi Goldberg, who noted that they "caused people to lose their minds."
17 As Esther Benbassa recounts in her dry but impressively succinct and informative history, they arrived in the Roman province of Gaul in the first centuries of the common era, and soon found themselves trod underfoot by the ascendant Christian church.
18 Mr. Jacobs simply posed the question more gorgeously, and succinctly, than pretty much anyone else.
19 Mostly fine novel about contesting ideologies, whose theme was succinctly expressed 50 years ago by Isaiah Berlin: "Freedom for the wolves has often meant death for the sheep."
20 Put succinctly in 2016 by Marley Dias, the then preteen founder of #1000BlackGirlBooks: “I was sick of reading about white boys and dogs.”