释义 |
Definition of thimbleful in English: thimblefulnounPlural thimblefuls ˈθɪmb(ə)lfʊlˈθɪmb(ə)lf(ə)lˈθɪmbəlˌfʊl A small quantity of liquid, especially alcohol. (尤指酒)极少量 极少量的白兰地酒。 Example sentencesExamples - Rub a thimbleful of water over your face and wipe off to finish.
- She says, ‘Mother had always been a binge drunker, not touching a thimbleful for weeks or months when she'd gotten her gullet full.’
- There will also be plenty of Glaswegian humour, a thimbleful of alcohol or two, and not a Hooray Henry in sight.
- I was instantly reminded of my time in Italy, where I spent all day and night in pavement cafes, sipping thimblefuls of espresso, strong and bitter.
- An over-eager fellow taster twirls his glass with a flourish and sends four deadly thimblefuls of Pinot Noir flying in your direction.
- A bird had flown up at me, curious about my beer, so I consciously poured a thimbleful down to his ledge.
- Whenever one of us would pour a thimbleful into his cup, the other two would jealously measure the outpouring with their eyes.
- Matron allowed me to come too, for a while, to watch, pirouette around and drink a thimbleful of ginger wine.
- Turns out there was only a thimbleful of stuff left in the bottle, Jack just hadn't gotten around to throwing it out.
- The typical daily food ration was, according to one civilian, ‘five slices bread, half a small cutlet, half a tumbler of milk, two thimblefuls of fat, a few potatoes and an eggcup of sugar’.
- Just a thimbleful of such water is sufficient to transform a healthy person, in hours, into a deathly ill cholera sufferer.
- You could wait until you've got only a thimbleful of gas in there, but why not fill up now and forget about it for the next 60,000 miles?
Synonyms bit, spot, dram, nip, drop, splash little, some, small amount Scottish informal scoosh Definition of thimbleful in US English: thimblefulnounˈθɪmbəlˌfʊlˈTHimbəlˌfo͝ol A small quantity of liquid, especially alcohol. (尤指酒)极少量 极少量的白兰地酒。 Example sentencesExamples - Just a thimbleful of such water is sufficient to transform a healthy person, in hours, into a deathly ill cholera sufferer.
- The typical daily food ration was, according to one civilian, ‘five slices bread, half a small cutlet, half a tumbler of milk, two thimblefuls of fat, a few potatoes and an eggcup of sugar’.
- She says, ‘Mother had always been a binge drunker, not touching a thimbleful for weeks or months when she'd gotten her gullet full.’
- An over-eager fellow taster twirls his glass with a flourish and sends four deadly thimblefuls of Pinot Noir flying in your direction.
- Rub a thimbleful of water over your face and wipe off to finish.
- There will also be plenty of Glaswegian humour, a thimbleful of alcohol or two, and not a Hooray Henry in sight.
- Matron allowed me to come too, for a while, to watch, pirouette around and drink a thimbleful of ginger wine.
- A bird had flown up at me, curious about my beer, so I consciously poured a thimbleful down to his ledge.
- Whenever one of us would pour a thimbleful into his cup, the other two would jealously measure the outpouring with their eyes.
- Turns out there was only a thimbleful of stuff left in the bottle, Jack just hadn't gotten around to throwing it out.
- You could wait until you've got only a thimbleful of gas in there, but why not fill up now and forget about it for the next 60,000 miles?
- I was instantly reminded of my time in Italy, where I spent all day and night in pavement cafes, sipping thimblefuls of espresso, strong and bitter.
Synonyms bit, spot, dram, nip, drop, splash |