foul
adjective/faʊl/
/faʊl/
(comparative fouler, superlative foulest)
Idioms - dirty and smelling bad
肮脏恶臭的;难闻的 - foul air/breath
污浊难闻的空气/气息 - a foul-smelling prison
臭烘烘的监狱 - Foul drinking water was blamed for the epidemic.
人们把这次的流行病归咎于污浊的饮用水。
Synonyms disgustingdisgustingfoul ▪ revolting ▪ repulsive ▪ offensive ▪ grossThese words all describe something, especially a smell, taste or habit, that is extremely unpleasant and often makes you feel slightly ill.disgusting extremely unpleasant and making you feel slightly ill:- What a disgusting smell!
这气味真难闻!
- She could smell his foul breath.
她闻得到他的口臭。
- The stew looked revolting.
这煨菜看上去令人作呕。
- disgusting/repulsive/offensive to somebody
- to find somebody/something disgusting/revolting/repulsive/offensive
- to smell/taste disgusting/foul/gross
- a(n) disgusting/foul/revolting/offensive/gross smell
- a disgusting/revolting/gross habit
- disgusting/offensive/gross behaviour
- a disgusting/revolting/repulsive man/woman/person
Extra Examples- She could smell his foul breath.
她闻得到他的口臭。 - The air in the cell was foul.
牢房里的空气臭烘烘的。
- foul air/breath
- (especially British English) very unpleasant; very bad
很令人不快的;很坏的 - She's in a foul mood.
她的情绪很糟。 - His boss has a foul temper.
他的老板脾气很坏。 - This tastes foul.
这个味道很差。
- She's in a foul mood.
- (of language) including rude words and swearing
synonym offensive充满脏话的;辱骂性的;下流的 - She exploded in a torrent of foul language.
她爆发出滔滔不绝的脏话。 - I'm sick of her foul mouth (= habit of swearing).
我讨厌她一开口就骂人的那张臭嘴。 - He called her the foulest names imaginable.
他用最下流的话辱骂她。
- She exploded in a torrent of foul language.
- (of weather) very bad, with strong winds and rain
恶劣的;风雨交加的 - a foul night
风雨交加的夜晚
- a foul night
- (literary) very evil or cruel
synonym abominable邪恶的;残忍的 - a foul crime/murder
邪恶的罪行;恶毒的谋杀
- a foul crime/murder
- [only before noun] (British English) done against the rules of a sport
犯规 - Harper was penalized for a foul tackle.
哈珀因铲球犯规而受到处罚。
- Harper was penalized for a foul tackle.
Word OriginOld English fūl, of Germanic origin; related to Old Norse fúll ‘foul’, Dutch vuil ‘dirty’, and German faul ‘rotten, lazy’, from an Indo-European root shared by Latin pus, Greek puos ‘pus’, and Latin putere ‘to stink’.
Idioms
by fair means or foul
- using dishonest methods if honest ones do not work
不择手段 - She’s determined to win, by fair means or foul.
她决心要赢,那怕是不择手段。
- She’s determined to win, by fair means or foul.
cry foul
- (informal) to complain that somebody else has done something wrong or unfair
抱怨;埋怨
fall foul of somebody/something
- to get into trouble with a person or an organization because of doing something wrong or illegal
(因做错事或不法行为)与…发生麻烦,与…产生纠葛,冒犯 - to fall foul of the law
触犯了法律
- to fall foul of the law