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单词 gallimaufry
释义

Definition of gallimaufry in English:

gallimaufry

noun ˌɡalɪˈmɔːfriˌɡæləˈmɔfri
  • A confused jumble or medley of things.

    大杂烩

    a glorious gallimaufry of childhood perceptions
    Example sentencesExamples
    • City Vision, a gallimaufry of old communists, Greens, and Labour activists, now embraces him.
    • As such, it seems nice and honest of the photography to show the work in the context of the reviewing: that is to say a gallimaufry of unrelated work, whittled down to a small pile.
    • And he's at it again in this latest gallimaufry.
    • This is a production which would bear re-visiting several times as there are nuance under the gallimaufry which I think are missed on the first viewing, where one is dazzled by the production and the performances.
    • Instead, the magic amounts merely to the introduction of one more unassimilable element to this gallimaufry of a novel.
    • These books were a hectic ragbag; the second a hurdle race through western history, tragic hero after tragic hero, the last two a gallimaufry of intimate materials and early poems précised.
    • Just put it on, the whole gallimaufry - the clowns and critters, the acrobats and aerialists - with as much pizazz as possible.
    • Helge Jacobsen's collection of French art is today housed in a new wing built by Henning Larsen in 1996, which completes the extraordinary architectural gallimaufry of the Ny Carlsberg.
    • The new work was not to be, in his words, ‘merely a roll-call of the great and the good, but also a gallimaufry of the eccentric and the bad’.
    • The third volume of John Julius Norwich's Christmas Crackers, Still More Christmas Crackers: 1990-1999 is as serendipitous a gallimaufry as its predecessors.
    • Beneath the relative uniformity of its standard, edited variety, American English is a rich gallimaufry of exotic and native stuffs.
    • Rather belatedly we've got round to The Collection (Chatto & Windus, 25) by Peter Ackroyd, which in Scots might be called a gallimaufry, comprising as it does journalism, book reviews, essays, short stories and lectures.
    • A gallimaufry of critics, songwriters, poets and novelists (including Joyce Carol Oates) take up the invitation to ‘help create new works of art’ about an American ballad of their choice.
    • They called it an eruption of a police state, and envisioned a gallimaufry of bizarre hidden agendas - from a pretext for oppressing evangelical Christians and gun owners, to a blank check for discriminating against blacks.
    • In the quarter century after the great fire, Deadwood experienced an extraordinary building boom, and the gold-rich town created a sparkling gallimaufry of late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century styles.
    • But he often serves simply as a broker amid the gallimaufry of the 25 member states' legal codes.
    • It's a strange gallimaufry of a book, the ‘144 poems’ all over the place formally, ranging from ordinary prose, through dialogues and found material to various kinds of free verse.
    • It is a gallimaufry of styles and models, maybe no more than an attempt to induce self-doubt in critics and readers who have admired the beautifully achieved adventurousness of his previous novels and stories.
    • Followers of teams in the Scottish Premier League can look forward a gallimaufry of experiences, high and low.
    Synonyms
    mixture, blend, mingling, combination, compound, fusion, composition, concoction, brew, alloy, merger, union, amalgamation, amalgam, coalition, cross, hybrid

Origin

Mid 16th century: from archaic French galimafrée 'unappetizing dish', perhaps from Old French galer 'have fun' + Picard mafrer 'eat copious quantities'.

Rhymes

orphrey

Definition of gallimaufry in US English:

gallimaufry

nounˌɡaləˈmôfrēˌɡæləˈmɔfri
  • 1A confused jumble or medley of things.

    大杂烩

    a glorious gallimaufry of childhood perceptions
    Example sentencesExamples
    • The third volume of John Julius Norwich's Christmas Crackers, Still More Christmas Crackers: 1990-1999 is as serendipitous a gallimaufry as its predecessors.
    • Followers of teams in the Scottish Premier League can look forward a gallimaufry of experiences, high and low.
    • They called it an eruption of a police state, and envisioned a gallimaufry of bizarre hidden agendas - from a pretext for oppressing evangelical Christians and gun owners, to a blank check for discriminating against blacks.
    • As such, it seems nice and honest of the photography to show the work in the context of the reviewing: that is to say a gallimaufry of unrelated work, whittled down to a small pile.
    • Instead, the magic amounts merely to the introduction of one more unassimilable element to this gallimaufry of a novel.
    • These books were a hectic ragbag; the second a hurdle race through western history, tragic hero after tragic hero, the last two a gallimaufry of intimate materials and early poems précised.
    • A gallimaufry of critics, songwriters, poets and novelists (including Joyce Carol Oates) take up the invitation to ‘help create new works of art’ about an American ballad of their choice.
    • City Vision, a gallimaufry of old communists, Greens, and Labour activists, now embraces him.
    • Rather belatedly we've got round to The Collection (Chatto & Windus, 25) by Peter Ackroyd, which in Scots might be called a gallimaufry, comprising as it does journalism, book reviews, essays, short stories and lectures.
    • But he often serves simply as a broker amid the gallimaufry of the 25 member states' legal codes.
    • The new work was not to be, in his words, ‘merely a roll-call of the great and the good, but also a gallimaufry of the eccentric and the bad’.
    • This is a production which would bear re-visiting several times as there are nuance under the gallimaufry which I think are missed on the first viewing, where one is dazzled by the production and the performances.
    • Beneath the relative uniformity of its standard, edited variety, American English is a rich gallimaufry of exotic and native stuffs.
    • Just put it on, the whole gallimaufry - the clowns and critters, the acrobats and aerialists - with as much pizazz as possible.
    • It is a gallimaufry of styles and models, maybe no more than an attempt to induce self-doubt in critics and readers who have admired the beautifully achieved adventurousness of his previous novels and stories.
    • And he's at it again in this latest gallimaufry.
    • In the quarter century after the great fire, Deadwood experienced an extraordinary building boom, and the gold-rich town created a sparkling gallimaufry of late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century styles.
    • It's a strange gallimaufry of a book, the ‘144 poems’ all over the place formally, ranging from ordinary prose, through dialogues and found material to various kinds of free verse.
    • Helge Jacobsen's collection of French art is today housed in a new wing built by Henning Larsen in 1996, which completes the extraordinary architectural gallimaufry of the Ny Carlsberg.
    Synonyms
    mixture, blend, mingling, combination, compound, fusion, composition, concoction, brew, alloy, merger, union, amalgamation, amalgam, coalition, cross, hybrid
    1. 1.1US A dish made from diced or minced meat, especially a hash or ragout.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Black bean, biltong, bouillabaisse… gallimaufry, gazpacho, gefilte fish… pavlova, pemmican, pizza - each has a long, intricate trace of travel behind it.
      • An olla podrida is a gallimaufry, a salmagundi, a potpourri, a hotchpotch, a miscellany of ingredients cooked together in the one pot.

Origin

Mid 16th century: from archaic French galimafrée ‘unappetizing dish’, perhaps from Old French galer ‘have fun’ + Picard mafrer ‘eat copious quantities’.

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更新时间:2024/10/19 13:21:41