释义 |
Definition of freakish in English: freakishadjective ˈfriːkɪʃˈfrikɪʃ Very unusual, strange, or unexpected. Example sentencesExamples - Look at the havoc that has been wreaked by unusually strong storms and freakish weather events all over the globe in recent years.
- At first hand it was a testament to the marvels of medical science; botched experiments and bad reactions of the recent kind are an extreme, almost freakish, rarity.
- The wintry weather took on freakish proportions with torrential rain turning to sideways sleet as the blustery wind continued to create havoc.
- They have every right to believe close investigation will establish the integrity of the system and prove the incident was truly freakish in nature.
- The weather was freakish, alternating between blazing sun and blistering showers.
- A freakish period of relatively warm weather had melted most of the ice and snow on the ground, although patches remained.
- Fine, but I'm not going to overlook the fact that the film is full of all these creative liberties or freakish coincidences - call them what you may.
- Put on the soppiest song you know and think how freakish it is that those lyrics could have just SO been written for the two of you and you cry your little eyes out and every inch of you aches to be in their arms.
- There are people out there who have seen their dwellings and possessions washed away on a vast, fast moving wall of water, who have lost all they owned to a freakish event of nature.
- This will seem very strange and freakish at first but after a few times you will get used to it and gradually come to enjoy it.
- At one point Rachel and Aiden have a freakish incident with a herd of malicious deer, and later there is reference to antlers that didn't seem to have any explanation.
- Sometimes I walk along the street and in a flash there's an image in my mind of a disgusting client, a freakish moment, an episode I want to push away to the back of my head, far out of sight.
- Temperatures are not rising evenly, but rather we are going to be subjected to increasingly freakish weather, like this summer's unbearable heat waves.
- If a strain proved unpredictably freakish, then we could be months into a pandemic before a vaccine was available.
- It's a pretty enough building made special by its literary association, its laconic guides and the resident cats with their freakish six- or seven-toed feet.
- It would be a mistake to dismiss the Satanic panic as a freakish aberrance, however.
- The new autumn designs are in the shops now, and for every beautifully cut coat, there is a freakish nightmare, covered in zips and vividly-dyed fur.
- All his classmates find him freakish, except when they're in the gym showers together.
- Everyone seems to be taking advantage of the freakish sunshine
- My work clothes don't disguise my freakish appearance here.
Synonyms unusual, anomalous, atypical, untypical, unrepresentative, abnormal, aberrant, irregular, fluky, exceptional, unparalleled, unaccountable, bizarre, queer, peculiar, odd strange, peculiar, odd, bizarre, queer, curious, funny, eccentric, outlandish, offbeat, off-centre
Derivatives adverb My self-restraint proved sagacious; he revealed himself to have freakishly hairy knees during the graduation ball. Example sentencesExamples - Still, at least I don't have freakishly large hands.
- I'm not a freak about things being sterilized or freakishly clean.
- Apparently, I'm very good, but she was freakishly amazing.
- I assumed he was just as freakishly strange as the rest of Robin's disorganized family.
noun The humor, the provocation, the freakishness, and the rather un-French dance-floor credibility all are of a piece with the rest of Gainsbourg's career, which began in the mid-1950s and ended with his death in 1991. Example sentencesExamples - After all, anyone who actually makes us feel proud of our freakishness is, I think, worth listening to.
- It reveals that in freakishness, broadly defined, there resides something beyond the possibility of subverting culturally enforced norms.
- Long gone (and permanently too, I hope) are the circus performances involving performing animals and horrific displays of human freakishness.
- It only seems right that a group that has so wholeheartedly celebrated the high freakishness of America should turn out to be freaks themselves.
Definition of freakish in US English: freakishadjectiveˈfrikɪʃˈfrēkiSH 1Bizarre or grotesque; abnormal. freakish and mischievous elves Synonyms strange, peculiar, odd, bizarre, queer, curious, funny, eccentric, outlandish, offbeat, off-centre - 1.1 Capricious or whimsical; unpredictable.
Example sentencesExamples - A freakish period of relatively warm weather had melted most of the ice and snow on the ground, although patches remained.
- This will seem very strange and freakish at first but after a few times you will get used to it and gradually come to enjoy it.
- Temperatures are not rising evenly, but rather we are going to be subjected to increasingly freakish weather, like this summer's unbearable heat waves.
- At one point Rachel and Aiden have a freakish incident with a herd of malicious deer, and later there is reference to antlers that didn't seem to have any explanation.
- The new autumn designs are in the shops now, and for every beautifully cut coat, there is a freakish nightmare, covered in zips and vividly-dyed fur.
- My work clothes don't disguise my freakish appearance here.
- Everyone seems to be taking advantage of the freakish sunshine
- It's a pretty enough building made special by its literary association, its laconic guides and the resident cats with their freakish six- or seven-toed feet.
- Put on the soppiest song you know and think how freakish it is that those lyrics could have just SO been written for the two of you and you cry your little eyes out and every inch of you aches to be in their arms.
- There are people out there who have seen their dwellings and possessions washed away on a vast, fast moving wall of water, who have lost all they owned to a freakish event of nature.
- Sometimes I walk along the street and in a flash there's an image in my mind of a disgusting client, a freakish moment, an episode I want to push away to the back of my head, far out of sight.
- They have every right to believe close investigation will establish the integrity of the system and prove the incident was truly freakish in nature.
- All his classmates find him freakish, except when they're in the gym showers together.
- Fine, but I'm not going to overlook the fact that the film is full of all these creative liberties or freakish coincidences - call them what you may.
- It would be a mistake to dismiss the Satanic panic as a freakish aberrance, however.
- The weather was freakish, alternating between blazing sun and blistering showers.
- Look at the havoc that has been wreaked by unusually strong storms and freakish weather events all over the globe in recent years.
- The wintry weather took on freakish proportions with torrential rain turning to sideways sleet as the blustery wind continued to create havoc.
- If a strain proved unpredictably freakish, then we could be months into a pandemic before a vaccine was available.
- At first hand it was a testament to the marvels of medical science; botched experiments and bad reactions of the recent kind are an extreme, almost freakish, rarity.
Synonyms unusual, anomalous, atypical, untypical, unrepresentative, abnormal, aberrant, irregular, fluky, exceptional, unparalleled, unaccountable, bizarre, queer, peculiar, odd
|