释义 |
Definition of something in English: somethingpronounˈsʌmθɪŋˈsəmˌθɪŋ 1A thing that is unspecified or unknown. 某物;某事 we stopped for something to eat 我们停下来吃点东西。 I knew something terrible had happened 我知道有可怕的事情发生了。 something about her frightened me 关于她的某些事情使我很害怕。 Example sentencesExamples - They had stopped at a service station, had something to eat and still caught up with us!
- If you want us to stop thinking of you that way, you could try going and being successful at something.
- She cringed for she feared that something far more terrible was going to happen.
- Even now, I'm always thankful that we have something to eat and a roof over our heads.
- Just because something may be physically unattainable is no need to stop striving for it.
- When you wait at the dentist's they at least provide you with something to read.
- It filled him with a conviction that there is something terribly wrong with this world.
- The biker then stopped and made several hand gestures and shouted something at me.
- If something doesn't blend well enough with the real actors then it should be left out till it can.
- Is this something you think has happened to you in your own work, regardless of whether it was a hit or not?
- Probably would be a good idea to stop for something to eat and drink after this, get some energy back.
- Can you suggest something we can take over the next few weeks to stop this happening again?
- It seemed so fitting for a gathering of people remembering something so terrible.
- By this point Paul had witnessed other comedy acts and felt it was something he was compelled to do.
- It was something that we were all terribly proud to be able to be associated with.
- After he had eaten he paced around for a while, looking for something to do to keep him busy.
- I love what I do, so it would have to be something really amazing to persuade me to stop.
- We usually go to see a movie or, if it's a nice evening, we get something to eat or drink and sit by the river.
- I think we were waiting for her to do something crazy, or to just stop doing anything at all.
- In six days' time the conjecture stops and we'll have something very real to discuss.
2Used in various expressions indicating that a description or amount being stated is not exact. 表示模糊的概念若干;什么;差不多 a wry look, something between amusement and regret 很怪的一个眼光,像是感到有趣,又像是有些遗憾。 grassland totalling something over three hundred acres 差不多有300多英亩的草场。 there were something like fifty applications 差不多有50份申请。 Example sentencesExamples - I don't feel too awful today considering we didn't get to bed until something like 4 or 5am.
- One of the women hands me a sharp metal lance, something between a sword and a skewer.
- An impressive high score on an early machine was something like two thousand points.
- I haven't seen it there for something like twelve or thirteen years!
- Id be happy if I could pull off something like that with the amount of money that had.
- I was an apprentice in a factory at the time so if I remember my pay packet at that time was something like £6 a week.
- Bill went behind Japanese lines into Burma, and I think that out of something like a hundred men, only six came back.
- They're going to spend something like 80 million euros on not saying anything at all with their new slogan.
- The recording rates for their contribution would have been something like £66 a person.
- It is something like Bob said earlier on, it is something we do in our own time.
- He says he played in something like 20 matches last season but, crucially, he was involved in five of the last six.
- The overall winner will pick up something like £500,000, which is not bad for a tenner per entry.
adverb ˈsʌmθɪŋˈsəmˌθɪŋ 1informal as submodifier Used for emphasis with a following adjective functioning as an adverb. 〈非正式〉 起强调作用,后跟做副词用的形容词很,非常 my back hurts something terrible 我的背疼得很厉害。 he used to take the mickey out of me something awful 他过去老是狠狠地嘲笑我。 Example sentencesExamples - It must hurt something terrible.
我的背疼得很厉害。 2dialect, archaic as submodifier To some extent; somewhat. 〈古或方〉有点;稍微 the people were something scared 人们感到有点恐惧。 Example sentencesExamples - Although we trained very well, I believe that we were something nervous because of the value of the telescope.
Phrasesinformal Added as a reference to an unspecified alternative similar to the thing mentioned. 〈非正式〉诸如此类的什么 you look like you just climbed a mountain or something 你看上去好像刚爬过山或是什么的。 Example sentencesExamples - I mean, being praised by him is like being force fed chocolate creams or something.
- So that you wouldn't pirate music or something, because they have a music division.
- If they didn't want to give Maggie a voice they could make her a deaf-mute or something.
- Maybe he's doing a celebrity endorsement or something in an attempt to bring them back.
- Will was starting work in an investment bank or something the very next morning.
- The middle stretch of poems do have slightly more narrative content or something.
- Man alive, somebody could write a blog or something about the train service around here.
- My message to the Pub owners is that it is now time to burn essential oils or something.
- They laugh because they think she wants them to do dance routines or something.
- On the front, it says something about Jesus, with a picture of a candle, or something.
quite (or really) something informal Something considered impressive or notable. 〈非正式〉不寻常的事;值得注意的事 Want to see the library? It's really something Example sentencesExamples - Most of my favorite jazz dates from about 1959, but this concert is really something.
- I'm not a Tarantino fan, but this film is really something (though what, I'm not sure).
- I know the pope was here recently and I didn't get a chance to meet him, but just being near him was really something.
- Now that's really something, given the presence of all those nasty leftie journos he so loves to hate.
- Petty singing Stand My Ground at the 911 American Tribute to Heroes was really something.
- The genuine friendliness and warmth of everyone here is really something.
- Queer Storytelling at the Drill Hall - I hear Shaun Levin is really something.
- We had a few battles a couple of years ago, but to do it in a major championship would be really something.
- Hypocrisy among the Democrats is never a shock, but this is really something.
- I had been a bit blasé about this exhibition, expecting to stroll through it, but it was really something.
informal An exceptional person or thing. 〈非正式〉异常的人(或事);特别出色的人(或事) the reaction from the crowd was something else 人群的反应则完全不同。 Example sentencesExamples - That guy really was something else, wasn't he?
1An amount in the region of. there were something like 50 applications 差不多有50份申请。 they taste something like swordfish Example sentencesExamples - Some people believe that this is something like an eco site in this region.
- The theory ran something like this: there is a finite amount of advertising space and a seller's market.
- The meeting where the service was green-lighted must have gone something like this.
- Our coolest regions are probably something like this area, temperate for this planet.
Richard was something of an expert at the game 理查德算得上是这种比赛的专家。 Example sentencesExamples - Both play for Saracens and they have formed something of a mutual admiration society.
- What followed is something of a blur, of being led by the hand from bar to bar.
- I think Cameron could be at the forefront of something of a revival for us northerly types.
- He also seems to be a bit of a philosopher, which must be something of a prerequisite in his position.
- There's something of the wizard in his bearing and you find yourself wanting to listen.
- My friends think he is something of a bounder but he says it is totally out of character for him to behave in this way.
- In the tourism business, holidays in the desert are something of a final frontier.
- The city's most marketable tourist site has something of a classical air about it.
- The couple met in Scotland about five years ago and Annabel has become something of a muse for him.
- It feels like there's something of a production line going on with Scottish actors.
— is worth considering; there is some truth in — 值得考虑;有些道理 people think I'm stupid because I think there's something in this alien business 人们觉得我蠢笨,因为我觉得这种怪异的事真的也值得考虑。 Example sentencesExamples - And I suppose there is something in the theory that people vote for who they like.
- Perhaps there is something in that hardman image after all.
- The comparison is not perfect but there is something in it.
- While there is something in such a description, it is grossly exaggerated.
- Maybe there is something in this 1st September thing…
- Of course there is something in the shallow interpretations.
- I do think there is something in the ‘Free nations don't attack each other’ credo.
- Even so, there is something in Williams's idea.
- I'm not entirely convinced of this but I think there is something in it.
- Perhaps there is something in this, given the state of history teaching in Scottish schools.
twenty-something (thirty-something, forty-something, etc.) informal An unspecified age between twenty and thirty (or thirty and forty, forty and fifty, etc.) 〈非正式〉30多岁(40多岁等) a forty-something has-been rock star as noun she writes a column geared to twenty- and thirty-somethings Example sentencesExamples - It was, she told her fellow researchers, as if a nonagenarian suddenly looked forty-something.
- He was about thirty-something and looked dirty; hadn't shaved in weeks.
- Like most of the All-Baseball.com writers, they are also thirty-something.
- I had promised myself that I would let loose and live like I was eighteen and not thirty-something.
- I was nineteen, going on ten, she was thirty-something and living with a German poet but she liked collecting people.
- But what is so significant about being thirty-something and being ready to lead?
OriginOld English sum thing (see some, thing). Definition of something in US English: somethingpronounˈsəmˌθɪŋˈsəmˌTHiNG 1A thing that is unspecified or unknown. 某物;某事 we stopped for something to eat 我们停下来吃点东西。 I knew something terrible had happened 我知道有可怕的事情发生了。 something about her frightened me 关于她的某些事情使我很害怕。 Example sentencesExamples - If something doesn't blend well enough with the real actors then it should be left out till it can.
- Is this something you think has happened to you in your own work, regardless of whether it was a hit or not?
- It was something that we were all terribly proud to be able to be associated with.
- She cringed for she feared that something far more terrible was going to happen.
- I think we were waiting for her to do something crazy, or to just stop doing anything at all.
- By this point Paul had witnessed other comedy acts and felt it was something he was compelled to do.
- In six days' time the conjecture stops and we'll have something very real to discuss.
- I love what I do, so it would have to be something really amazing to persuade me to stop.
- When you wait at the dentist's they at least provide you with something to read.
- If you want us to stop thinking of you that way, you could try going and being successful at something.
- The biker then stopped and made several hand gestures and shouted something at me.
- We usually go to see a movie or, if it's a nice evening, we get something to eat or drink and sit by the river.
- Can you suggest something we can take over the next few weeks to stop this happening again?
- It seemed so fitting for a gathering of people remembering something so terrible.
- Just because something may be physically unattainable is no need to stop striving for it.
- After he had eaten he paced around for a while, looking for something to do to keep him busy.
- It filled him with a conviction that there is something terribly wrong with this world.
- Even now, I'm always thankful that we have something to eat and a roof over our heads.
- Probably would be a good idea to stop for something to eat and drink after this, get some energy back.
- They had stopped at a service station, had something to eat and still caught up with us!
2Used in various expressions indicating that a description or amount being stated is not exact. 表示模糊的概念若干;什么;差不多 a wry look, something between amusement and regret 很怪的一个眼光,像是感到有趣,又像是有些遗憾。 grassland totaling something over three hundred acres 差不多有300多英亩的草场。 there were something like fifty applications 差不多有50份申请。 Example sentencesExamples - It is something like Bob said earlier on, it is something we do in our own time.
- One of the women hands me a sharp metal lance, something between a sword and a skewer.
- They're going to spend something like 80 million euros on not saying anything at all with their new slogan.
- An impressive high score on an early machine was something like two thousand points.
- He says he played in something like 20 matches last season but, crucially, he was involved in five of the last six.
- I don't feel too awful today considering we didn't get to bed until something like 4 or 5am.
- The overall winner will pick up something like £500,000, which is not bad for a tenner per entry.
- Bill went behind Japanese lines into Burma, and I think that out of something like a hundred men, only six came back.
- Id be happy if I could pull off something like that with the amount of money that had.
- The recording rates for their contribution would have been something like £66 a person.
- I was an apprentice in a factory at the time so if I remember my pay packet at that time was something like £6 a week.
- I haven't seen it there for something like twelve or thirteen years!
adverbˈsəmˌθɪŋˈsəmˌTHiNG 1informal Used for emphasis with a following adjective functioning as an adverb. 〈非正式〉 起强调作用,后跟做副词用的形容词很,非常 my back hurts something terrible 我的背疼得很厉害。 Example sentencesExamples - It must hurt something terrible.
我的背疼得很厉害。 2dialect, archaic To some extent; somewhat. 〈古或方〉有点;稍微 the people were something scared 人们感到有点恐惧。 Example sentencesExamples - Although we trained very well, I believe that we were something nervous because of the value of the telescope.
Phrasesinformal Added as a reference to an unspecified alternative similar to the thing mentioned. 〈非正式〉诸如此类的什么 you look like you just climbed a mountain or something 你看上去好像刚爬过山或是什么的。 Example sentencesExamples - They laugh because they think she wants them to do dance routines or something.
- On the front, it says something about Jesus, with a picture of a candle, or something.
- Man alive, somebody could write a blog or something about the train service around here.
- I mean, being praised by him is like being force fed chocolate creams or something.
- Will was starting work in an investment bank or something the very next morning.
- My message to the Pub owners is that it is now time to burn essential oils or something.
- So that you wouldn't pirate music or something, because they have a music division.
- Maybe he's doing a celebrity endorsement or something in an attempt to bring them back.
- The middle stretch of poems do have slightly more narrative content or something.
- If they didn't want to give Maggie a voice they could make her a deaf-mute or something.
informal An exceptional person or thing. 〈非正式〉异常的人(或事);特别出色的人(或事) the reaction from the crowd was something else 人群的反应则完全不同。 Example sentencesExamples - That guy really was something else, wasn't he?
Richard was something of an expert at the game 理查德算得上是这种比赛的专家。 Example sentencesExamples - It feels like there's something of a production line going on with Scottish actors.
- The city's most marketable tourist site has something of a classical air about it.
- He also seems to be a bit of a philosopher, which must be something of a prerequisite in his position.
- What followed is something of a blur, of being led by the hand from bar to bar.
- Both play for Saracens and they have formed something of a mutual admiration society.
- I think Cameron could be at the forefront of something of a revival for us northerly types.
- In the tourism business, holidays in the desert are something of a final frontier.
- There's something of the wizard in his bearing and you find yourself wanting to listen.
- The couple met in Scotland about five years ago and Annabel has become something of a muse for him.
- My friends think he is something of a bounder but he says it is totally out of character for him to behave in this way.
really (or quite) something informal Something considered impressive or notable. 〈非正式〉不寻常的事;值得注意的事 Want to see the library? It's really something Example sentencesExamples - I know the pope was here recently and I didn't get a chance to meet him, but just being near him was really something.
- I had been a bit blasé about this exhibition, expecting to stroll through it, but it was really something.
- Petty singing Stand My Ground at the 911 American Tribute to Heroes was really something.
- Hypocrisy among the Democrats is never a shock, but this is really something.
- Now that's really something, given the presence of all those nasty leftie journos he so loves to hate.
- The genuine friendliness and warmth of everyone here is really something.
- Most of my favorite jazz dates from about 1959, but this concert is really something.
- We had a few battles a couple of years ago, but to do it in a major championship would be really something.
- I'm not a Tarantino fan, but this film is really something (though what, I'm not sure).
- Queer Storytelling at the Drill Hall - I hear Shaun Levin is really something.
there is something in/to — — is worth considering; there is some truth in — 值得考虑;有些道理 perhaps there is something to his theory I think there's something in this alien business 人们觉得我蠢笨,因为我觉得这种怪异的事真的也值得考虑。 Example sentencesExamples - Maybe there is something in this 1st September thing…
- I do think there is something in the ‘Free nations don't attack each other’ credo.
- The comparison is not perfect but there is something in it.
- Perhaps there is something in this, given the state of history teaching in Scottish schools.
- While there is something in such a description, it is grossly exaggerated.
- Of course there is something in the shallow interpretations.
- Even so, there is something in Williams's idea.
- I'm not entirely convinced of this but I think there is something in it.
- And I suppose there is something in the theory that people vote for who they like.
- Perhaps there is something in that hardman image after all.
thirty-something (forty-something, etc.) informal An unspecified age between thirty and forty (forty and fifty, etc.) 〈非正式〉30多岁(40多岁等) I'm guessing she's forty-something as noun she writes a column geared to twenty- and thirty-somethings Example sentencesExamples - Like most of the All-Baseball.com writers, they are also thirty-something.
- I was nineteen, going on ten, she was thirty-something and living with a German poet but she liked collecting people.
- But what is so significant about being thirty-something and being ready to lead?
- It was, she told her fellow researchers, as if a nonagenarian suddenly looked forty-something.
- He was about thirty-something and looked dirty; hadn't shaved in weeks.
- I had promised myself that I would let loose and live like I was eighteen and not thirty-something.
OriginOld English sum thing (see some, thing). |