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单词 unmanageable
释义

unmanageableadj.

Brit. /(ˌ)ʌnˈmanᵻdʒəbl/, U.S. /ˌənˈmænədʒəb(ə)l/
Forms: see un- prefix1 and manageable adj.; also 1600s unmanegeable.
Origin: Formed within English, by derivation. Etymons: un- prefix1, manageable adj.
Etymology: < un- prefix1 + manageable adj.
1.
a. Difficult or impossible to handle or manipulate properly or conveniently owing to physical qualities such as size, shape, weight, condition, etc.; awkward, cumbersome, unwieldy.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > harm or detriment > disadvantage > uselessness > inconvenience > [adjective] > unhandy
unwield1390
unhandsome1548
unwieldy1552
wieldy1588
awk1593
unmanageable1600
uneasy1611
unhandy1664
awkward1695
1600 C. Edmondes Obseruations Fiue Bks. Caesars Comm. i. ix. 28 They chose rather to cast them [sc. shields] away..then to betray their life with an vnmanageable weapon.
1658 E. Phillips New World Eng. Words at Immanity Such a hugenesse as renders a thing unmanageable.
1705 Acct. Origin & Formation Fossil-shells 40 The unmanageable Stiffness of the Ground disturbs the natural direction of those radical Shoots.
1779 Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) 69 422 It required an index of an unmanageable length.
1805 in Ld. Nelson Dispatches & Lett. (1846) VII. 166 So that the Ship was entirely unmanageable.
1885 Manch. Examiner 17 Jan. 5/4 A great, awkward, unmanageable goods train.
1936 W. Faulkner Absalom, Absalom! v. 152 We bore the awkward and unmanageable box past the stair's close turning.
2006 New Yorker 13 Feb. 52/3 Her giggle and her cloud of unmanageable hair became iconic.
b. Of an immaterial thing: difficult or impossible to cope with; inconvenient, awkward, demanding.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > harm or detriment > disadvantage > uselessness > inconvenience > [adjective]
disconvenienta1475
discommodious1540
unmanageable1650
inconvenient1651
ill-convenient1708
unbain1828
1650 T. Fuller Pisgah-sight of Palestine iii. i. 314 Hierosolyma being a confluence of six short syllables was unmanagable in ordinary verse.
a1712 T. Halyburton Nat. Relig. Insufficient (1714) Introd. 5 Any one..will quickly find himself eas'd of this unmanageable Task [sc. choosing a religion], which the Deists would set him.
1746 P. Annet Christianity Preferable to Deism 56 Our distinguished Moderns..are equally gravell'd with their Predecessors, when they come to the Discussion of this unmanageable Point.
1827 W. Scott Two Drovers in Chron. Canongate 1st Ser. I. xiii. 307 The hill rung with the discordant attempts of the Saxon upon the unmanageable monosyllable.
1947 T. M. Cooper Regiam Majestatem 4 The committee's unmanageable size.
2008 Independent 2 Jan. 3/6 Our debt helpline sees a huge spike in callers suffering from unmanageable debt in January.
2. Difficult or impossible to control, govern, or regulate.
a. Of an event, action, or situation.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > difficulty > types of difficulty > [adjective] > difficult or intractable (of things)
wickc1330
riotous1340
wickeda1352
untreatablec1374
frowarda1400
inobedient1495
stubborn?1518
unwieldya1538
unruly1548
wieldlessa1560
hard1560
untoward1566
tickle1570
churlish1577
unwieldsome1579
rebellious1587
disobedient1588
unframeable1593
unwilling1593
untractable1601
unmanageable1606
intractable1607
surly1609
unwedgeablea1616
dogged1627
uncontrollable1648
obdurate1651
morose1652
uncompliant1659
sullen1678
unpliant1716
ungovernable1773
sulky1867
intractile1880
unwieldly1881
bunglesome1915
1606 H. Wotton Let. in L. P. Smith Life & Lett. Sir H. Wotton (1907) (modernized text) I. 370 The matter itself..very rebellious and unmanageable.
1691 A. Brown Vindicatory Schedule iii. 49 The conduct of our Lives..committed..to Tottering and Wavering Chance unmanageable by the discretest conduct.
1795 W. Paley View Evidences Christianity (ed. 3) I. ii. ii. 378 Convulsions..are amongst the..most uncertain and unmanageable applications to the human frame.
1827 Med. Recorder (Philadelphia) July 221 The mildest forms of the disease were rendered severe and unmanageable, by free purging or vomiting.
1898 ‘H. S. Merriman’ Roden's Corner xxi. 222 When human affairs suddenly appear to become unmanageable.
1984 A. Livingstone Lou Andreas-Salomé vii. 103 Between creative periods, Rilke suffered unmanageable attacks of depression and anxiety.
2014 Derby Evening Tel. (Nexis) 29 Jan. 4 Members have to admit they are powerless over gambling and that their lives have become unmanageable.
b. Of a person or a person's character or disposition.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > will > decision > obstinacy or stubbornness > [adjective] > disobediently stubborn
incorrigiblea1340
unchastisable1382
contumaxc1386
stubbornc1386
stoutc1410
contumacec1425
staffish?a1513
unwieldy1513
untractable1538
intractable1545
prefract?1549
incounselable1554
indocible1555
uncorrectable1562
refractorious1563
haggard1566
neck-stiff1570
uncounsellablea1578
refractary1583
contumacious1603
refractarious1609
refractory1615
unmanageable1616
immorigerous1623
refractive1623
pervicacious1633
unrectifiable1645
undocible1653
undocile1656
untractible1670
unadvisable1672
recalcitrant1797
unguidable1822
recalcitrary1861
1616 F. Rous Medit. of Instr. lxxx. 422 Those whose crooked, and more vnmannagable nature, standeth stiffe against the discipline of the spirit and their owne desires.
a1637 B. Jonson Magnetick Lady i. i. 43 in Wks. (1640) III My humour being as stubborne, as the rest, And as unmannageable.
1665 J. Glanvill Sciri Tuum: Authors Defense To T. Albius sig. a2v, in Scepsis Scientifica They..are rendred unmanegeable by any Authority, but that of Absolute Dominion.
1728 J. Morgan Compl. Hist. Algiers I. v. 316 That tough, lofty, unmanageable Monarch [sc. Henry VIII].
1791 J. Bentham Panopticon i. 39 As to safe custody and good order, four [prisoners] is not such a number as can well be deemed unmanageable.
1804 J. Abernethy Surg. Observ. 186 [During] the greater part of the delirium he had been very unmanageable.
1887 Spectator 25 June 854/2 The rise of soldiers who might be unmanageable or too successful.
1956 A. I. Richards Chisungu i. 49 Bemba women have the reputation..for being quite unmanageable by men of other tribes.
1997 J. Steingarten Man who ate Everything (1998) iii. 177 Some parents believe that their children become wild and unmanageable after eating sucrose.
c. Of an animal. Also in figurative context.
ΚΠ
1635 J. Maxwell tr. Duc de Richelieu Emblema Animae ix. 75 What reason have wee then to approve of wild and immoderate men, which come so neere these unmanageable and unsatiable Beasts?
1678 A. Behn Sir Patient Fancy i. i. 2 [The fops] of the Town are the most unmanagable Beasts in Nature.
1681 R. L'Estrange tr. Cicero Offices (ed. 2) 45 Horses..grown Fierce, and Unmenageable, by being chaf'd.
1712 D. Waterland Serm. in Wks. (1823) VIII. 383 When they grow impatient of the curb..they do but show..how much more unruly and unmanageable they had been without it.
1795 R. Cumberland Henry I. iii. v. 244 His death was instantaneous, a fall from his horse; an unmanageable, accursed animal threw him from his back.
1823 W. Scott Quentin Durward I. ix. 230 Each fresh gambade of his unmanageable horse.
1855 Poultry Chron. 2 611/1 She [sc. a hen] was rather conceited, unmanageable, and very touchy about interference.
1878 R. B. Smith Carthage 314 The elephants..became unmanageable.
1949 Youth's Instructor 9 Apr. 26/1 A small black mongrel, which was brought in by the owner to be put out of the way because it was so unmanageable.
1994 Legion June 17/2 Then came the slithering, frightened and unmanageable pigs.

Derivatives

unˈmanageably adv.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > will > decision > obstinacy or stubbornness > [adverb] > disobediently stubborn
stoutly1568
incorrigibly1610
refractarily1618
contumaciously1626
refractorilyc1646
pervicaciously1650
unmanageably1701
unguidably1837
1701 J. Collier tr. Marcus Aurelius Conversat. with Himself xi. 212 If they [sc. Circumstances] prove unmanageably cross,..Look out for something that's more serviceable to the Dignity of your Nature.
1860 J. A. Froude Hist. Eng. (ed. 2) VI. 329 Meantime, Philip..was becoming unmanageably impatient.
2007 S. Sinha Graham Greene vi. 159 To impose a pattern upon his almost unmanageably large production needs a strict mental discipline.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2014; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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adj.1600
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更新时间:2024/9/23 11:26:35