释义 |
triviatriv‧i‧a /ˈtrɪviə/ noun [plural] triviaOrigin: 1900-2000 trivial - I find that I can remember trivia such as old sports results, but I can't remember the things that I really need.
- News programs tend to focus on trivia at the expense of serious issues.
- The magazine was full of trivia and gossip.
- Have we become the Huxleyan mob irretrievably affixed to the tube and addicted to its terror and its trivia?
- I had been dealing with trivia but this was different.
- It looked like a mock-up set in a middle-class soap opera, shining with domestic trivia, very clean.
- It will highlight 1, 000 courses, some obscure, and delve into history, trivia and tradition.
- My memories are full of anecdotes and trivia, not stultified by rigid dogma.
something that is not important► trivia information or facts that are not important and have no real use or value: · The magazine was full of trivia and gossip.· I find that I can remember trivia such as old sports results, but I can't remember the things that I really need to remember. ► Gamesboard, nouncatch, nouncat's cradle, nouncold, adjectiveconsolation prize, noundice, noundie, noundraw, verbfollow-my-leader, nounfriendly, noungame, noungyroscope, nounhome, nounhoopla, nounhopscotch, nounjigsaw, nounjump rope, nounmahjong, nounplayground, nounpoint, nounretire, verbroll, verbroll, nounRussian roulette, nounscoreboard, nounscorecard, nounshaker, nountag, nountiddlywinks, nountreasure hunt, nountrick, nountrivia, nounwarm, adjective 1detailed facts about history, sport, famous people etc: a selection of golfing trivia a trivia quiz2unimportant or useless details: meaningless trivia |