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单词 drab
释义

drab1

adjectivedrabbest, drabber drabdræb
  • 1Lacking brightness or interest; drearily dull.

    无光彩的;缺少情趣的,单调乏味的

    the landscape was drab and grey

    景色灰暗。

    her drab suburban existence

    她那郊区的单调乏味的生活。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • They jumped and turned about in time to see a gaunt, sour-faced gray man in drab clothing appear with a blue cap in his hand.
    • To be fair, much of that is probably due to the general lack of interest in Howard's drab party.
    • She offered Billy a clear route of escape from his drab existence, even if was hard to understand how she could really be interested in him.
    • Life in the orphanage was a rather drab existence.
    • The wizard turned what would have been a dull and drab lecture into an interesting one.
    • They seemed a drab assortment of mediocrities.
    • It continues to thrive on juxtapositions, the mixture of the shiny new gems and the bright life behind the drab facades of the old buildings.
    • In a clear departure from the dull and drab appearance that Government publications are usually identified with, the newsletters sport a jaunty look.
    • It's the only point of interest in his excruciatingly drab life, which is rendered more unhappy by his incessant bullying at the hands of seven overbearing sisters.
    • Once in France, the family settled in a cramped flat in the drab Paris suburb of Trappes, which is close to Versailles.
    • A great performance by Polanski as the boring, drab office worker who slowly goes insane, and, consequently, sheds his inhibited personality.
    • Grouping four or five boxwood in one area and using different sized pots make an eyecatching bright green display to brighten up an otherwise drab spot.
    • As soon as the door closed behind her I hurried to the dirty window in the front room and I watched as she walked down the street looking remarkably out of place in the drab surroundings in her bright green dress.
    • I also think many scenes look too drab and boring, when others are so bright and vivid, but I can't deny that the story works.
    • I was working in the day for commercial illustrators in Pitt Street and it was a drab existence I can tell you.
    • Handicrafts have been directed not only to fulfil one's daily requirement but to add beauty and brightness in the otherwise dull and drab existence.
    • Every one of them seemed to have a stream of people entering or leaving them, except for one, a squat building painted brightly against its drab background.
    • Looking around I could see clumps of snowdrops which brightened the drab countryside.
    • Whatever this meeting brought, one thing for sure was that it would brighten my somewhat drab existence - my so-called life.
    • I'm really feeling quite drab and dull this week.
    Synonyms
    colourless, grey, greyish, dull, dull-coloured, washed out, neutral, pale, muted, lacklustre, lustreless, muddy, watery
    lightish brown, brownish, brownish-grey, mousy, dun-coloured
    dingy, dreary, dismal, cheerless, gloomy, sombre, depressing
    uninteresting, dull, boring, tedious, monotonous, dry, dreary, wearisome
    unexciting, bland, non-stimulating, unimaginative, uninspiring, uninspired, insipid, lustreless, lacklustre, vapid, flat, stale, trite, vacuous, feeble, pallid, wishy-washy, colourless, limp, lame, tired, lifeless, zestless, spiritless, sterile, anaemic, barren, tame, bloodless, antiseptic
    middle-of-the-road, run-of-the-mill, commonplace, mediocre, nondescript, characterless, mundane, unexceptional, unremarkable, humdrum, prosaic
  • 2Of a dull light brown colour.

    黄褐色的;浅褐色的

    drab camouflage uniforms

    黄褐色迷彩服。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • They seemed to be called away from whatever task they happened to be doing, dressed in drab blacks, browns, and blues.
    • They were dressed in their brown drab uniform with armor strapped over it and sporting open faced helmets; they were the enemy.
    • After months in the desert, surrounded by drab camouflage gear, the soldiers smiled broadly at the flight attendants as they boarded the plane.
    • The jester was wearing drab brown, had tied his curly black hair back neatly, and on the whole looked like an entirely different person.
    • Outside of the breeding season, the male is drab brown with hints of yellow and white wing-bars.
    • The hall chosen for the day's meeting was covered in drab brown, and filled with seats in a semicircle arrangement, slanted down and around the stage, at the foot of the seating.
    • We captured nine drab males and nine bright males from each site.
    • His hat matched his light brown, drab overcoat.
    • Part of this comes from the business, but part of it comes from creative use of drab colours.
    • For the costumes they had gone quite traditional Isreali with long skirts for both sexes and very drab colours.
    • All of them wore their drab browns with the exception of their red-clad King.
    • The castle was a dark grey in stone, built into a lush gray mountain, on top of earth that was a very drab shade of light black.
    • The shape-changer looked down at himself, observing drab brown feathers, barred and speckled, that covered a body half the size of the bird before him.
    • A drab brown little bird, it has a weak but musical song, which doesn't carry far but can be heard from low bushes or hedges.
    • A splendid Stalagmite standing 2 to 3 feet high and set apart from the drab brown of the rest of the passage by its white crystalline purity greeted my ascent.
    • Females are a mottled drab brown with a long, orange, black splotched bill, black crown, dark eye-line, and orange legs.
    • Set in the middle-of-nowhere, the color schemes of drab browns and blues enhance the terror already in the air.
    • Garbed in regally beaded, colorful gowns of orange and blue-green instead of their normally drab brown shifts, they looked almost like royalty.
    • As if dressing for their performance, the males turn from drab brown to a pale beige color that contrasts with the darker mud.
    • They are colored to blend in with their sandy environment: most are whitish or drab brown, and many have red-tinged or dark mottling along the back and head.
    • Despite its drab colour, Tokyo is immaculately clean.
noun drabdræb
mass noun
  • 1Fabric of a dull light brown colour.

    黄褐色的;浅褐色的

    1. 1.1drabs Clothes, especially trousers, made of drab.
      褐色布服装(尤指裤子)
      a young man dressed in drabs

      一个身穿褐色衣服的年轻男子。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • They wore beige camouflage drabs, a black helmet, which also doubled as a gas mask, and wore revlar vests.
      • Oh, and don't forget heartburn suffered by many when an Army battle dress uniform was pressed upon us in exchange for the old olive drabs.
      • They wore winter drabs, and I couldn't decide whether they were Australasian or Hoary-headed grebes.

Derivatives

  • drably

  • adverbˈdrabliˈdræbli
    • ‘I was terrified that the first episode began so slowly and drably that it would put people off,’ he admits.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The dancers are white-faced and dressed drably in grey and black, with smears on their costumes like chalk.
      • From the cockpit, we could see rows of drably camouflaged warplanes filling every inch of ramp space.
      • This time she wasn't dressing as drably as possible.
      • That headline reads like the title of a Monty Python sketch or an obscure, slightly funny but drably photographed art-house movie.
  • drabness

  • nounˈdrabnəsˈdræbnəs
    • I got the underpainting done today, experiencing the old feeling that a nice fresh drawing was being submerged in a more or less monotone drabness.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Moreover, ways must be found to create communal urban space capable of mitigating the drabness and dreariness of most public housing developments.
      • The secret: excellent raw materials and handicraft skills that have somehow survived decades of war and years of egalitarian drabness.
      • From the first strains of funky double bass, they manage to transport the cold and harassed shoppers around them from the local drabness to a world where the sun shines and the living is easy.
      • The contrast between the plain exterior and the immensely rich interior is like a sharp blow: perhaps an intended device to remind us of the drabness of the outer life and the vibrant richness of the inner life?

Origin

Mid 16th century (as a noun denoting undyed cloth): probably from Old French drap 'cloth' (see drape).

  • trappings from Late Middle English:

    Animal traps (Old English) have nothing to do with trappings, which go back to Latin drappus ‘cloth’, the source of draper, drab [M16] originally undyed cloth, and drapery (Late Middle English). In the 14th century trappings were an ornamental harness for a horse, but now people more often use the word in contexts such as ‘the trappings of success’ for the outwards signs or objects associated with a particular role or job.

Rhymes

blab, cab, confab, crab, Crabbe, dab, fab, flab, gab, grab, jab, kebab, lab, nab, scab, slab, smash-and-grab, stab, tab

drab2

noun drabdræb
archaic
  • 1A slovenly woman.

    邋遢女人

  • 2A prostitute.

    娼妓

Origin

Early 16th century: perhaps related to Low German drabbe 'mire' and Dutch drab 'dregs'.

drab1

adjectivedrabdræb
  • 1Lacking brightness or interest; drearily dull.

    无光彩的;缺少情趣的,单调乏味的

    the landscape was drab and gray

    景色灰暗。

    her drab suburban existence

    她那郊区的单调乏味的生活。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Handicrafts have been directed not only to fulfil one's daily requirement but to add beauty and brightness in the otherwise dull and drab existence.
    • It continues to thrive on juxtapositions, the mixture of the shiny new gems and the bright life behind the drab facades of the old buildings.
    • They seemed a drab assortment of mediocrities.
    • I'm really feeling quite drab and dull this week.
    • Every one of them seemed to have a stream of people entering or leaving them, except for one, a squat building painted brightly against its drab background.
    • A great performance by Polanski as the boring, drab office worker who slowly goes insane, and, consequently, sheds his inhibited personality.
    • I also think many scenes look too drab and boring, when others are so bright and vivid, but I can't deny that the story works.
    • In a clear departure from the dull and drab appearance that Government publications are usually identified with, the newsletters sport a jaunty look.
    • Grouping four or five boxwood in one area and using different sized pots make an eyecatching bright green display to brighten up an otherwise drab spot.
    • As soon as the door closed behind her I hurried to the dirty window in the front room and I watched as she walked down the street looking remarkably out of place in the drab surroundings in her bright green dress.
    • The wizard turned what would have been a dull and drab lecture into an interesting one.
    • She offered Billy a clear route of escape from his drab existence, even if was hard to understand how she could really be interested in him.
    • They jumped and turned about in time to see a gaunt, sour-faced gray man in drab clothing appear with a blue cap in his hand.
    • To be fair, much of that is probably due to the general lack of interest in Howard's drab party.
    • Looking around I could see clumps of snowdrops which brightened the drab countryside.
    • It's the only point of interest in his excruciatingly drab life, which is rendered more unhappy by his incessant bullying at the hands of seven overbearing sisters.
    • Once in France, the family settled in a cramped flat in the drab Paris suburb of Trappes, which is close to Versailles.
    • Life in the orphanage was a rather drab existence.
    • Whatever this meeting brought, one thing for sure was that it would brighten my somewhat drab existence - my so-called life.
    • I was working in the day for commercial illustrators in Pitt Street and it was a drab existence I can tell you.
    Synonyms
    colourless, grey, greyish, dull, dull-coloured, washed out, neutral, pale, muted, lacklustre, lustreless, muddy, watery
    uninteresting, dull, boring, tedious, monotonous, dry, dreary, wearisome
  • 2Of a dull light brown color.

    黄褐色的;浅褐色的

    drab camouflage uniforms

    黄褐色迷彩服。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Set in the middle-of-nowhere, the color schemes of drab browns and blues enhance the terror already in the air.
    • As if dressing for their performance, the males turn from drab brown to a pale beige color that contrasts with the darker mud.
    • The jester was wearing drab brown, had tied his curly black hair back neatly, and on the whole looked like an entirely different person.
    • The shape-changer looked down at himself, observing drab brown feathers, barred and speckled, that covered a body half the size of the bird before him.
    • We captured nine drab males and nine bright males from each site.
    • They seemed to be called away from whatever task they happened to be doing, dressed in drab blacks, browns, and blues.
    • After months in the desert, surrounded by drab camouflage gear, the soldiers smiled broadly at the flight attendants as they boarded the plane.
    • They were dressed in their brown drab uniform with armor strapped over it and sporting open faced helmets; they were the enemy.
    • Despite its drab colour, Tokyo is immaculately clean.
    • Outside of the breeding season, the male is drab brown with hints of yellow and white wing-bars.
    • Part of this comes from the business, but part of it comes from creative use of drab colours.
    • Females are a mottled drab brown with a long, orange, black splotched bill, black crown, dark eye-line, and orange legs.
    • All of them wore their drab browns with the exception of their red-clad King.
    • His hat matched his light brown, drab overcoat.
    • Garbed in regally beaded, colorful gowns of orange and blue-green instead of their normally drab brown shifts, they looked almost like royalty.
    • A drab brown little bird, it has a weak but musical song, which doesn't carry far but can be heard from low bushes or hedges.
    • The hall chosen for the day's meeting was covered in drab brown, and filled with seats in a semicircle arrangement, slanted down and around the stage, at the foot of the seating.
    • A splendid Stalagmite standing 2 to 3 feet high and set apart from the drab brown of the rest of the passage by its white crystalline purity greeted my ascent.
    • The castle was a dark grey in stone, built into a lush gray mountain, on top of earth that was a very drab shade of light black.
    • For the costumes they had gone quite traditional Isreali with long skirts for both sexes and very drab colours.
    • They are colored to blend in with their sandy environment: most are whitish or drab brown, and many have red-tinged or dark mottling along the back and head.
noundrabdræb
  • Fabric of a dull brownish color.

    黄褐色的;浅褐色的

Origin

Mid 16th century (as a noun denoting undyed cloth): probably from Old French drap ‘cloth’ (see drape).

drab2

noundræbdrab
archaic
  • 1A slovenly woman.

    邋遢女人

  • 2A prostitute.

    娼妓

Origin

Early 16th century: perhaps related to Low German drabbe ‘mire’ and Dutch drab ‘dregs’.

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更新时间:2024/12/27 3:53:16