释义 |
Examples:take a lot of trouble (over sb or sth)—lit. much thunder but little rain; fig. a lot of talk but little action—a lot of people (literary)—take a lot of trouble (idiom); painstaking—one's lot (of good and bad fortune)—be put to a lot of trouble—Trouble issues from the mouth (idiom). A loose tongue may cause a lot of trouble.—have experienced a lot of—at the cost of a lot of effort—a lot of water has flowed under the bridge since then—loud thunder, but only tiny drops of rain (idiom); a lot of talk, but no action—(used for abstract things) a good deal, a lot of—Illness enters by the mouth, trouble comes out by the mouth (idiom). A loose tongue may cause a lot of trouble.—thousands of words (idiom); having a lot of things say—fig. A loose tongue may cause a lot of trouble.—fig. wasting a lot of effort on trivialities—take a lot of trouble to do sth—whether it's right or wrong doesn't make a lot of difference—lit. When a lazy donkey is turning a grindstone, it takes a lot of time off for peeing and pooing—give a lot of thought to sth.—lot (in a game of chance)—lot, section of land, ground—complain of one's bitter lot—boasts a lot, but nothing comes of it [idiom.]— |