释义 |
exuberantex‧u‧be‧rant /ɪɡˈzjuːbərənt $ ɪɡˈzuː-/ adjective exuberantOrigin: 1400-1500 French, Latin, present participle of exuberare ‘to exist in large quantities’, from uber ‘producing a lot’, from uber ‘udder’ - an exuberant celebration
- He is energetic and exuberant.
- A similar process is also taking place in darts led by an exuberant Geordie commentator with a Cambridge History degree.
- And here, gaggles of exuberant fourth-graders begged for his autograph as if he were Pluto in Disneyland.
- Kip shot me an exuberant scowl.
- The backplate of H-5 looks barren and bland compared to the exuberant frippery scrolled over the same part of H-4.
- The prose is exuberant and knowingly exotic.
- They were both totally naked and exuberant in their lovemaking.
- What she intended to be was gay, pleasure-giving, exuberant, free, beautiful, healthy.
1happy and full of energy and excitement: an exuberant personality2exuberant decorations, patterns etc are exciting and complicated or colourful: exuberant carvings—exuberance noun [uncountable]: She needs to try and control her natural exuberance.—exuberantly adverb |