释义 |
nutcasenut‧case /ˈnʌtkeɪs/ noun [countable] informal  - Tania is a major nutcase.
- A nutcase, without a doubt.
- And Philip thought if anyone was a nutcase it was that boy in the wood.
- Apart, she thought drily, from complete nutcases like myself.
- As a result the Eurovision Song Contest delays a hard core of trivia-obsessed nutcases for four hours each year.
- My personal assistant was my high school sweetheart, Mrs Simpson, who was a complete nutcase.
a crazy person► nut · A lot of people think he's a complete nut, but he's actually quite harmless.· The woman sounds like a real nut.somebody is some kind/type of nut · He started asking me a lot of questions about my personal life. I think the guy's some kind of nut. ► nutcase/loony someone who behaves in a crazy and often amusing way and who has strange ideas: · Our old maths teacher was a real nutcase -- he used to eat chalk because he said it was good for your bones.a bunch of loonies: · In the 1960s, people thought that vegetarians were a bunch of loonies. ► maniac/lunatic especially spoken someone who behaves in a stupidly dangerous way: · Ken drives like a maniac.· Some lunatic threw a can of lighter fluid on the fire. ► nutter British informal someone who has strange ideas or who behaves in a strange and often frightening way: · Sometimes you get these nutters calling you at 3 o'clock in the morning.· Burns can be a nutter - especially when he's had a few drinks.complete nutter: · He's a complete nutter. He's got no sense whatsoever. someone who behaves in a crazy way SYN idiot: He’s a complete nutcase. |