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单词 helter-skelter
释义

Definition of helter-skelter in English:

helter-skelter

adverb & adjective ˌhɛltəˈskɛltəˌhɛltərˈskɛltər
  • In disorderly haste or confusion.

    仓促杂乱的(地),混乱的(地)

    as adjective the helter-skelter dash to unity

    仓促匆忙的统一。

    as adverb hurtling helter-skelter down the pavement

    沿人行道慌张地往前狂奔。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • It's a helter-skelter ride and you can reach speeds of more than 10 knots in the process.
    • Our minds don't work in a straight line, but rather more like a pinball machine, bouncing ideas off one another helter-skelter.
    • Efforts to vaccinate the nation's children went forward immediately, in somewhat helter-skelter fashion, to beat the summer onset of the disease.
    • Giggling, his friend Brent ran helter-skelter beside him.
    • Tell them that you feel friendship is undervalued in this helter-skelter crazy materialistic world.
    • A helter-skelter mix of documentary and music video, the film contextualises Vivaldi's life through The Four Seasons, the most recorded and popular classical music ever written.
    • The stunningly modern helter-skelter overpasses seem rather incongruous with a melange of bikes and cars that follow a system of road safety entirely their own.
    • Vehicles coming in the gates are checked for bombs, and white U.N. vehicles, mostly Toyota 4Runners, are parked helter-skelter around a dirt lot.
    • I smiled to myself as the wind blew tossing the leaves helter-skelter and making them dance like ballerinas, minus the tutus.
    • We can not simply go out, helter-skelter, and try to transform the biosphere, transform this planet, without knowing what we're doing.
    • Inevitably you pay a price for treating the novel as helter-skelter melodrama.
    • He also noticed rumpled clothing all over the floor, and a number of ripped plastic packages lying helter-skelter on the carpet.
    • Just when you think that there is nothing that can surprise you any more in the crazy helter-skelter world that is Scottish football, along comes an event which makes your jaw drop.
    • And any reader who had imagined that her helter-skelter style was actually the product of careful contrivance will here be disabused.
    • Approaching this year's jamboree in Gloucestershire, he is riding better than ever at 34, having put the brakes on a helter-skelter lifestyle.
    • At times in this hectic, helter-skelter world, an unpretentious reminder of the obvious is in order, and Dick and Larry have done it here.
    • Science seems to offer him a point from which to view the helter-skelter human sagas created by the phantasms of mind and emotion.
    • Fans will face the usual scraping and scrimping and helter-skelter hunting for tickets.
    • The game continued at a helter-skelter pace, amid which Phil Vickery emerged from the replacements' bench to the loudest cheer of the afternoon.
    • Fellini's tale of a middle-aged woman sloughing off her inhibitions is a caprice of a piece, a helter-skelter slide through the stages of abandon.
    Synonyms
    headlong, pell-mell, hotfoot, post-haste, hastily, in a hurry, hurriedly, as fast as possible, as quickly as possible, at full speed, at full pelt, at full tilt, hell for leather, recklessly, precipitately, impetuously, impulsively, carelessly, heedlessly, wildly
    informal like a bat out of hell, at a lick, like the wind, like greased lightning, like a bomb, like mad, like crazy, like blazes
    British informal like the clappers, at a rate of knots, like billy-o
    North American informal lickety-split
    literary apace, hurry-scurry
noun ˌhɛltəˈskɛltəˌhɛltərˈskɛltər
  • 1British A fairground amusement consisting of a tall spiral slide winding around a tower.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Large, multi-coloured plastic chutes on the mound would make great helter-skelter slides.
    • There are waltzers, dodgems, helter-skelters and one or two old fashioned merry-go-rounds with properly painted horses.
    • There's a vast market, with traders clad in frock coats, a fairground with hurdy-gurdies and helter-skelters, an artificial ice rink and three outdoor stages full of choirs and bands.
    • I was spewing up iced-coffee and chips after about fifty descents in a helter-skelter.
    • In a bid to create a rival attraction to the London Eye and the Manchester Wheel, Ulverston Town Council decides to convert the monument into a helter-skelter.
    • His design transports you to the gaudy, decrepit fairground, complete with working helter-skelter and carousel, and shows you the beauty in the ramshackle and ruinous.
  • 2in singular Disorder; confusion.

    仓促杂乱的(地),混乱的(地)

    the helter-skelter of a school day

    仓促匆忙的统一。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The object has been to trim some of the excesses indulged in during the helter-skelter of Celtic tiger times.
    • That's the way it's supposed to be - an evolving drama with nuance, color, deliberate pacing, and bursts of action that take you away from the helter-skelter of our otherwise rush-rush worlds.
    • Somebody has to get slain in the helter-skelter of this combat.
    • Also, you have to bear in mind that a pullout cannot just be a chaotic one, a helter-skelter.
    • And the band were rarely better than on this track, with its climb-the-ladder introduction that paused briefly before sending you off down their pop-rock helter-skelter.
    • Only when I was outside again, in the mad helter-skelter of sound and light and asphalt, did I feel properly disgusted with my sentimentality and the way I'd laid myself open for the cameras.
    • I must say that I find ‘Harmonica Dance’ more than just clever, and that ‘Clockwork’ merits more than description as another helter-skelter.
    • His fast, free-wheeling style, is inspired lunacy, and his helter-skelter of a show promises the audience the ride of their lives.
    • Other similar ideas slip down the lurid helter-skelter of modern life.
    • In 1990, Ireland's GDP per head was 75 per cent of Belgium's but such has been the helter-skelter of the 1990s, we are now almost ten per cent richer.
    • But why dwell on such things when the sun has returned with renewed resolve, teasing blooms from the helter-skelter of bare branches?
    • Off the pitch, O'Sullivan leads a quiet life away from the helter-skelter of international rugby.
    • The feeling at the pit now is that we have just gone through a helter-skelter of emotions and we need to put the men's needs first and have a period of stabilisation.

Origin

Late 16th century (as an adverb): a rhyming jingle of unknown origin, perhaps symbolic of running feet or from Middle English skelte 'hasten'.

  • pell-mell from Late Middle English:

    People like words that combine two almost identical forms, like helter-skelter (late 16th century), mishmash (Late Middle English), namby-pamby, and wishy-washy (late 17th century)—and pell-mell. Its second element represents a form of French mesler ‘to mix’ (related to medley). The first part might be from pelle ‘shovel’, giving the sense ‘mixed together with a shovel’, but the simple love of rhyme may be the only explanation needed.

Rhymes

belter, delta, melter, pelta, Shelta, shelter, swelter, welter

Definition of helter-skelter in US English:

helter-skelter

adverb & adjectiveˌheltərˈskeltərˌhɛltərˈskɛltər
  • In disorderly haste or confusion.

    仓促杂乱的(地),混乱的(地)

    as adverb hurtling helter-skelter down the pavement

    沿人行道慌张地往前狂奔。

    as adjective she had blamed her grogginess on a helter-skelter lifestyle
    Example sentencesExamples
    • At times in this hectic, helter-skelter world, an unpretentious reminder of the obvious is in order, and Dick and Larry have done it here.
    • Vehicles coming in the gates are checked for bombs, and white U.N. vehicles, mostly Toyota 4Runners, are parked helter-skelter around a dirt lot.
    • He also noticed rumpled clothing all over the floor, and a number of ripped plastic packages lying helter-skelter on the carpet.
    • Fellini's tale of a middle-aged woman sloughing off her inhibitions is a caprice of a piece, a helter-skelter slide through the stages of abandon.
    • I smiled to myself as the wind blew tossing the leaves helter-skelter and making them dance like ballerinas, minus the tutus.
    • We can not simply go out, helter-skelter, and try to transform the biosphere, transform this planet, without knowing what we're doing.
    • Just when you think that there is nothing that can surprise you any more in the crazy helter-skelter world that is Scottish football, along comes an event which makes your jaw drop.
    • The stunningly modern helter-skelter overpasses seem rather incongruous with a melange of bikes and cars that follow a system of road safety entirely their own.
    • Fans will face the usual scraping and scrimping and helter-skelter hunting for tickets.
    • Tell them that you feel friendship is undervalued in this helter-skelter crazy materialistic world.
    • It's a helter-skelter ride and you can reach speeds of more than 10 knots in the process.
    • Inevitably you pay a price for treating the novel as helter-skelter melodrama.
    • And any reader who had imagined that her helter-skelter style was actually the product of careful contrivance will here be disabused.
    • Science seems to offer him a point from which to view the helter-skelter human sagas created by the phantasms of mind and emotion.
    • The game continued at a helter-skelter pace, amid which Phil Vickery emerged from the replacements' bench to the loudest cheer of the afternoon.
    • Efforts to vaccinate the nation's children went forward immediately, in somewhat helter-skelter fashion, to beat the summer onset of the disease.
    • Approaching this year's jamboree in Gloucestershire, he is riding better than ever at 34, having put the brakes on a helter-skelter lifestyle.
    • Giggling, his friend Brent ran helter-skelter beside him.
    • A helter-skelter mix of documentary and music video, the film contextualises Vivaldi's life through The Four Seasons, the most recorded and popular classical music ever written.
    • Our minds don't work in a straight line, but rather more like a pinball machine, bouncing ideas off one another helter-skelter.
    Synonyms
    headlong, pell-mell, hotfoot, post-haste, hastily, in a hurry, hurriedly, as fast as possible, as quickly as possible, at full speed, at full pelt, at full tilt, hell for leather, recklessly, precipitately, impetuously, impulsively, carelessly, heedlessly, wildly
nounˌheltərˈskeltərˌhɛltərˈskɛltər
  • 1in singular Disorder; confusion.

    仓促杂乱的(地),混乱的(地)

    the helter-skelter of a school day

    仓促匆忙的统一。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • I must say that I find ‘Harmonica Dance’ more than just clever, and that ‘Clockwork’ merits more than description as another helter-skelter.
    • Also, you have to bear in mind that a pullout cannot just be a chaotic one, a helter-skelter.
    • Other similar ideas slip down the lurid helter-skelter of modern life.
    • The object has been to trim some of the excesses indulged in during the helter-skelter of Celtic tiger times.
    • His fast, free-wheeling style, is inspired lunacy, and his helter-skelter of a show promises the audience the ride of their lives.
    • Somebody has to get slain in the helter-skelter of this combat.
    • The feeling at the pit now is that we have just gone through a helter-skelter of emotions and we need to put the men's needs first and have a period of stabilisation.
    • In 1990, Ireland's GDP per head was 75 per cent of Belgium's but such has been the helter-skelter of the 1990s, we are now almost ten per cent richer.
    • Off the pitch, O'Sullivan leads a quiet life away from the helter-skelter of international rugby.
    • That's the way it's supposed to be - an evolving drama with nuance, color, deliberate pacing, and bursts of action that take you away from the helter-skelter of our otherwise rush-rush worlds.
    • Only when I was outside again, in the mad helter-skelter of sound and light and asphalt, did I feel properly disgusted with my sentimentality and the way I'd laid myself open for the cameras.
    • But why dwell on such things when the sun has returned with renewed resolve, teasing blooms from the helter-skelter of bare branches?
    • And the band were rarely better than on this track, with its climb-the-ladder introduction that paused briefly before sending you off down their pop-rock helter-skelter.
  • 2British A tall spiral slide winding around a tower at a fair.

    〈英〉(娱乐场中围绕高塔的)旋转滑梯

    Example sentencesExamples
    • There's a vast market, with traders clad in frock coats, a fairground with hurdy-gurdies and helter-skelters, an artificial ice rink and three outdoor stages full of choirs and bands.
    • I was spewing up iced-coffee and chips after about fifty descents in a helter-skelter.
    • In a bid to create a rival attraction to the London Eye and the Manchester Wheel, Ulverston Town Council decides to convert the monument into a helter-skelter.
    • There are waltzers, dodgems, helter-skelters and one or two old fashioned merry-go-rounds with properly painted horses.
    • His design transports you to the gaudy, decrepit fairground, complete with working helter-skelter and carousel, and shows you the beauty in the ramshackle and ruinous.
    • Large, multi-coloured plastic chutes on the mound would make great helter-skelter slides.

Origin

Late 16th century (as an adverb): a rhyming jingle of unknown origin, perhaps symbolic of running feet or from Middle English skelte ‘hasten’.

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更新时间:2024/10/19 10:27:18