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单词 much
释义
much
(mʌ )
1. adverb [ADVERB after verb] A1
You use much to indicate the great intensity, extent, or degree of something such as an action, feeling, or change. Much is usually used with 'so', 'too', and 'very', and in negative clauses with this meaning.
She laughs too much.
Thank you very much.
My hairstyle hasn't changed much since I was five.
2. adverb [ADVERB after verb] B1
If something does not happen much, it does not happen very often.
He said that his father never talked much about the war.
Gwen had not seen her Daddy all that much, because mostly he worked on the ships.
Do you get back East much?
3. adverb [ADV too] B1
You use much in front of 'too' or comparative adjectives and adverbs in order to emphasize that there is a large amount of a particular quality. [emphasis]
The skin is much too delicate.
You'd be so much happier if you could see yourself the way I see you.
He had written to The Times and then, much more unacceptably, allowed himself to be interviewed on television.
4. adverb [ADV like n, ADVERB noun]
If one thing is much the same as another thing, it is very similar to it.
The day ended much as it began.
Sheep's milk is produced in much the same way as goat's milk.
5. determiner A2
You use much to indicate that you are referring to a large amount of a substance or thing.
They are grown on the hillsides in full sun, without much water.
His job was to assess how much aid was required.
People are happy because there's not much crime here.
Furniture is so bulky, it takes so much room.
Much is also a pronoun.
...eating too much and drinking too much.
There was so much to talk about.
Much is also a quantifier.
Much of the time we do not notice that we are solving problems.
She does much of her work abroad.
Her father had been a merchant seaman, absent for much of her childhood.
6. adverb A2
You use much in expressions such as not much, not very much, and too much when replying to questions about amounts.
'Can you hear it where you live?' He shook his head. 'Not much.'
'Do you care very much about what other people think?'—'Too much.'
7. quantifier B2
If you do not see much of someone, you do not see them very often.
I don't see much of Tony nowadays.
We won't be seeing much of each other for a while.
8. determiner A1
You use much in the expression how much to ask questions about amounts or degrees, and also in reported clauses and statements to give information about the amount or degree of something.
How much money can I afford?
See just how much fat and cholesterol you're eating.
I'm always very aware of how much work there is still to be done.
Krock told this story to McCauley and asked him how much truth there was in it.
Much is also an adverb.
She knows how much this upsets me but she persists in doing it.
How much cooler will it get?
Much is also a pronoun.
How much do you earn?
Greg made a vague gesture to indicate how much.
Synonyms: a lot, plenty, a great deal, lots [informal]  
9. determiner B1
You use much in the expression as much when you are comparing amounts.
I shall try, with as much patience as is possible, to explain yet again.
Their aim will be to produce as much milk as possible.
With an 18-watt fluorescent bulb you get as much light but use 75% less electricity.
10. phrase
You use much as to introduce a fact which makes something else you have just said or will say rather surprising.
Much as they'd like to go home, they're resigned to staying until the end of the year.
11. as much phrase
You use as much in expressions such as 'I thought as much' and 'I guessed as much' after you have just been told something and you want to say that you already believed or expected it to be true.
You're waiting for a woman–I thought as much.
12. as much as phrase B1+
You use as much as before an amount to suggest that it is surprisingly large. [emphasis]
The organisers hope to raise as much as £6m for charity.
13. much less phrase
You use much less after a statement, often a negative one, to indicate that the statement is more true of the person, thing, or situation that you are going to mention next.
They are always short of water to drink, much less to bathe in.
14. nothing much phrase B2
You say nothing much to refer to something that is not very interesting or important.
'What was stolen?'—'Oh, nothing much.'
Nothing much interesting seemed to be happening.
15. not much of a phrase
If you describe something as not much of a particular type of thing, you mean that it is small or of poor quality.
It hasn't been much of a holiday.
It's not much of a career, you may think.
16. so much for phrase
If you say so much for a particular thing, you mean that it has not been successful or helpful. [informal]
He has spent 19 million pounds, lost three cup finals and been relegated. So much for money.
17. so much for phrase
So much for is used to indicate that you have finished talking about a subject. [spoken]
Well, so much for the producers. But what of the consumers?
18. not so much phrase
If you say that something is not so much one thing as another, you mean that it is more like the second thing than the first.
I don't really think of her as a daughter so much as a very good friend.
She told me she was not so much leaving her job as it was leaving her.
19. so much as phrase
If you say that someone did not do so much as perform a particular action, you are emphasizing that they did not even do that, when you were expecting them to do more. [emphasis]
I didn't so much as catch sight of him all day long.
Laura had not reproached him, never so much as mentioned it.
She auctioned off the car without so much as taking a ride in it.
20. so much so phrase B2
You use so much so to indicate that your previous statement is true to a very great extent, and therefore it has the result mentioned.
He himself believed in freedom, so much so that he would rather die than live without it.
21. too much phrase B2
If a situation or action is too much for you, it is so difficult, tiring, or upsetting that you cannot cope with it.
His inability to stay at one job for long had finally proved too much for her. [+ for]
22. very much phrase B2
You use very much to emphasize that someone or something has a lot of a particular quality, or that the description you are about to give is particularly accurate. [emphasis]
...a man very much in charge of himself.
Yorkshire is still very much a farming community with good meat, good dairy produce and eggs.
Something was very much the matter.
23. a bit much phrase
If you say that something is a bit much, you are annoyed because you think someone has behaved in an unreasonable way. [mainly British, informal, feelings]
It's a bit much expecting me to dump your boyfriend for you.
24. not up to much phrase
If you say that something is not up to much, you mean that it is of poor quality. [British, informal]
My own souffles aren't up to much.
This business isn't up to much.
much-
(mʌtʃ- )
combining form
Much- combines with past participles to form adjectives which emphasize the intensity of the specified state or action. [emphasis]
I'm having a much-needed rest.
...a much-improved version of last season's model.
Quotations:
much of a muchnessJohn Vanburgh & Colley CibberThe Provok'd Husband
Idioms:
not much cop [British, informal]
not very good
She looked round the big room: `there's no one here but us, this place can't be much cop.'
much ado about nothing [journalism]
a lot of fuss about something which is not important
French newspapers described the international row as much ado about nothing.
too much information [informal]
said to mean that you do not want to hear any more about something, because it is private or embarrassing
`I've been to the toilet twice already.' `Too much information!'
Translations:
Chinese: 许多的, 非常, 许多
Japanese: 多くの, 大いに, たくさん
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更新时间:2024/11/13 11:00:50