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单词 fizz
释义

Definition of fizz in English:

fizz

verb fɪzfɪz
[no object]
  • 1(of a liquid) produce bubbles of gas and make a hissing sound.

    his lemonade was still fizzing at the top of the glass
    Example sentencesExamples
    • The liquid around it fizzed and crackled, sparks flashing through the mixture.
    • It is best consumed when chilled and should foam and fizz like beer.
    • The waters the ship sank into were now bubbling and fizzing with charred metal.
    • As a water droplet hangs from the crack, the carbon dioxide escapes, much as a bottle of sparkling water fizzes when opened.
    • It bubbled and fizzed visibly through the sides.
    • I took a gulp of pop and rubbed my nose to get rid of the bubbles fizzing up there.
    • The bubbles in the tub popped and fizzed for a few seconds.
    • Usually I have to kind of force myself to smile, but I suddenly felt strange inside, as if the ice had been melted and the remaining water was fizzing.
    • Nathaniel handed Davis a small vile of clear liquid, bubbles fizzing and popping at the top.
    • Lancaster suddenly realized his soda can was crushed in his hand, and bubbling liquid was fizzing down his wrist onto the leather chair.
    • It fizzed up over the top, and almost into her lap but she pulled it away so the soda dripped onto the floor.
    • The mixture bubbled and fizzed and then, with a defying pop, settled into a cloudy blue potion.
    • When he opened the door and stepped inside, he found a single, steam-clouded room lined with changing stalls, its wooden floor pocked with deep holes fizzing with bubbling water.
    • ‘Mom won't know I took it,’ she thought as she popped the top and it fizzed.
    • When iceberg ice melts quickly, the bubbles released from it make a sound like soda water fizzing.
    • I dropped the bottle at her feet, so the liquid noisily sloshed and fizzed.
    • The bubbles from the carbonated soda fizzed unpleasantly in my insides.
    • Trent cried, for the exact moment she turned away, the liquids had started fizzing.
    • His glass, in front of the candle, writhing flame visible through the clear liquid, illuminating the bubbles spinning and fizzing their way upward.
    • It fizzed; it foamed; it had all the trappings of a real experiment.
    Synonyms
    effervesce, sparkle, bubble, froth, foam, seethe
    literary roil, spume
    1. 1.1 Make a buzzing or crackling sound.
      carbide lamps fizzed in the darkness
      Example sentencesExamples
      • I quickly sat before the fiery red of my flush could be exposed to the entire cafeteria, who only just then were beginning to talk again, the buzz of gossip fizzing on my ears.
      • The 2-1 defeat was thanks in no small part to the backing of a home crowd that fizzed and crackled into the night sky.
      • The only light was from a fizzing yellow overhead lamp that cast a golden glow on Samantha's head.
      • His jaw was parted wide, and a fizzing crackle hummed from within his throat, like the beginning of a patchy radio transmission.
      • The machines' circuits fizzed and cracked, and finally gave in.
      • His head filled with buzzes, clicks, pops, fizzes, whirs - then, more strangely, with xylophones and the song of whales.
      • A spark fizzed and crackled, and he stepped into the dark opening, light trailing around him, and flames licking the air behind.
      • And as a dazzling display of fireworks fizzed and crackled in the night sky, a theatrical snow storm added an instant touch of winter to the delight of hundreds of wide-eyed youngsters.
      • The bulb, the standard on its side, fizzed and cracked.
      Synonyms
      crackle, sputter, buzz, hiss, fizzle, crack
    2. 1.2with adverbial Move with or display excitement, exuberance, or liveliness.
      anticipation began to fizz through his veins
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Stewart is positively fizzing with excitement.
      • He would sometimes drift off to sleep with these ideas fizzing and bubbling around in the deep drink of his mind.
      • I sprung for the corridor thankfully and hastily when the doors hissed open, my head still fizzing with the annoying sound of their girlish chatter.
      • Something inside of me started fizzing, bubbling up inside of me.
      • I look forward to the candidate meeting I will attend next week - it's sure to be fizzing with excitement!
      • Jane and Denise are visibly fizzing over with excitement about their new career.
      • Stella was fizzing around the office like a school chemistry experiment gone mad.
      • She crackles and fizzes with energy throughout the play.
      • He is grinning and fizzing and very excited.
      • This raw spectacle overflows with fizzing stories which unveil the chaotic comedy and tragedy behind a flawed wedding reception.
      • Inside she felt like she was fizzing, so many bubble's rising up were rising up now she felt like she might pop.
      • Elation seemed to bubble and fizz in my throat, and I could only giggle like a silly little girl.
      • Players fizzed around the pitch like annoyed wasps, buzzing after the ball (or, more often than not, after the legs of the opposition).
      • The play fizzes with excitement, sex, uncertainty and tragedy as a result.
noun fɪzfɪz
mass noun
  • 1The quality of being fizzy; effervescence.

    the champagne had lost its fizz
    Example sentencesExamples
    • The fizz in soda pop is carbon dioxide dissolved in water.
    • It isn't the coldness, but the surface of the ice cube itself that creates the fizz.
    • This is what gives the drink it's fizz and what gives it that lively taste.
    • It involves putting yeast and sugar together in a bottle to create fizz.
    • The researchers say the same principal applies to any drink that gets its fizz from carbon dioxide.
    • Sparkling wines should be served in think glasses with straight side or flutes so that the fizz is preserved.
    • Sparkling water is not so harmful because it contains no sugar and the fizz is less concentrated, Mr Robson added.
    • The crucial factor in the quality of every sparkling wine is how the fizz is added.
    • None dared to open the seal and experience the fizz.
    • It's dry with ripe passion fruit and mango flavours finished off with a sherbet fizz.
    • Spring is the time in her restaurant for rum drinks, cocktails with fruit and drinks with fizz.
    • One expert calls some champagne that spent almost 50 years underwater in the English Channel absolutely fine, though lacking in fizz.
    • Champagne is supposed to be for romance, I guess because nothing says love like fizz up your nose.
    • It seems that the bubbles in such drinks do not simply provide fizz, but change the flavor of the drink as well.
    • But now we are starting to think the 6-pack might just be owned by multi-nationals and be unhealthy, fermenting yellow fizz.
    • This has everything I am looking for in a soda: Grapefruit, natural ingredients, the colour pink and a mild fizz.
    • Even there, he says, he heard about his hero only as a chemist - the man who discovered oxygen and invented the use of carbon dioxide to put fizz in drinks.
    • It's quite fruity with green apple, lemon and a delicate, fine fizz.
    • They are able to keep the fizz inside because the contents of the can are under higher pressure.
    • It is this escape of carbon dioxide that gives these drinks their fizz.
    Synonyms
    effervescence, sparkle, fizziness, bubbles, bubbliness, gassiness, carbonation, aeration
    froth, foam, mousse, lather, suds, head
    1. 1.1informal An effervescent drink, especially sparkling wine.
      a glass of your favourite fizz
      Example sentencesExamples
      • For me fizz, preferably champagne and preferably drunk out of doors, takes the place of lager and there is still plenty of cut-price choice around.
      • But it was a beautiful evening, so we sat with our fizz at a table outside and watched the sky dim.
      • So even when good local fizz came on to the market, the French had been established at the top for some time, and they intended to keep it that way.
      • If you're strapped for cash you could try a less expensive bottle of fizz.
      • ‘It is lovely, really nice and warm,’ she said, clutching a goblet of fizz.
      • Would you believe in this country we sell 35 million bottles of fizz per year?
      • No one would be surprised if he chose to celebrate the event with a glass of home-grown fizz.
      • Far better than any of the cheap, mean, dry fizz.
      • English fizz is a home-produced wine that you can drink without wincing or blushing.
      • We passed on a sweet and ordered a second bottle of fizz instead.
      • It was bad enough having to keep her upright what with all that free fizz but once Frank spotted the guest of honour things went from bad to worse.
      • It would be difficult to take your bottle of fizz onto the terrace as the review suggests, however, because the bar does not have a terrace.
      • Salmon pink and beautifully delicate, this fizz has subtle, fruity aromas and strawberry ice-lolly flavours without the sweetness.
      • Now he is opening his own champagne shop and café where people can sit and enjoy a glass of his finest fizz at £4.50 a pop.
      • Afterwards about 30 of us went to an Italian deli for pasta, tiramisu and non-stop fizz.
      • But do please help yourself to a glass of fizz.
      • The sister is planning a visit at the weekend bringing no less than six bottles of wine and fizz for my professional scrutiny.
      • With candles all around the bathroom and a glass of fizz in hand, it was the perfect place to drift off and forget about the outside world.
      • I could have stayed there all day, sipping fizz, denting my credit card irreparably and ruining family relations forever.
      • Tough life, you're probably thinking: he gets to drink fizz all day at someone else's expense.
      Synonyms
      sparkling wine, champagne
      informal bubbly, champers, sparkler
    2. 1.2 A buzzing or crackling sound.
      the fizz of 300 sparklers
      Synonyms
      crackle, crackling, buzz, buzzing, hiss, hissing, sizzle, sizzling, crack, sputter, white noise
    3. 1.3 Exuberance or liveliness.
      she saw I had lost some of my fizz
      Example sentencesExamples
      • By then the fizz was largely gone from the home team and the Irish supporters left the ground as they had entered it.
      • Alas, they have more sax than sex appeal and typify the surprising lack of fizz in their staccato union of song, dance and clipped dialogue.
      • But then a few innings into it, he loses his fizz and is like one of the has-beens.
      • It's got some fizz and fun, but looks oddly dated in an 1980s way that hasn't yet become classic.
      • But he has also restored some of fizz to Budget Day.
      • You want all the fizz of high fashion, and you want it now.
      • Because they never built the show up to a proper climax, this may have contributed to the lack of fizz in the audience.
      • All either manager cared about was the lack of fizz in a first half which dragged by.
      • If we went in at too high a rate, we could face permanent deflationary pressure, taking the fizz out of what is currently the most buoyant large economy in Europe.
      • Palpably lacking in fizz, it took some 26 minutes for a shot on goal from either side, another minute before we had one on target.
      • All the fizz - such as it is - comes from the market-based think tanks.
      • Some kids from the audience joined her on the stage and tried to add fizz.
      • It seems to be one of those words of rock 'n' roll origin that describes the ‘stuff’ inside a person that gives them that extra bit of fizz and sparkle and swagger to get through life.
      • And, adding fizz to the weekend was a dazzling catwalk.
      • A veritable fizz and sense of revival wafted up and down the Harrogate International Centre's famous circular stairway.
      • His writing in the 60s which I read in my late schooldays had the urgent fizz of newly discovered and prohibited drugs.
      • This film is about a married couple that is nearly perfect on the surface, but has lost some of the fizz underneath.
      Synonyms
      ebullience, exuberance, liveliness, life, vivacity, animation, vigour, brio, energy, verve, dash, spirit, sparkle, enthusiasm, buoyancy, jauntiness, zest
      informal pizzazz, pep, zing, zip, go, get-up-and-go, oomph

Origin

Mid 17th century: imitative.

Rhymes

biz, Cadíz, Cadiz, frizz, gee-whiz, his, is, Liz, Ms, phiz, quiz, squiz, swizz, tizz, viz, whizz, wiz, zizz
 
 

Definition of fizz in US English:

fizz

verbfɪzfiz
[no object]
  • 1(of a liquid) produce bubbles of gas and make a hissing sound.

    the mixture fizzed like mad
    Example sentencesExamples
    • As a water droplet hangs from the crack, the carbon dioxide escapes, much as a bottle of sparkling water fizzes when opened.
    • It bubbled and fizzed visibly through the sides.
    • Usually I have to kind of force myself to smile, but I suddenly felt strange inside, as if the ice had been melted and the remaining water was fizzing.
    • The bubbles from the carbonated soda fizzed unpleasantly in my insides.
    • The liquid around it fizzed and crackled, sparks flashing through the mixture.
    • I dropped the bottle at her feet, so the liquid noisily sloshed and fizzed.
    • Lancaster suddenly realized his soda can was crushed in his hand, and bubbling liquid was fizzing down his wrist onto the leather chair.
    • Trent cried, for the exact moment she turned away, the liquids had started fizzing.
    • When he opened the door and stepped inside, he found a single, steam-clouded room lined with changing stalls, its wooden floor pocked with deep holes fizzing with bubbling water.
    • The bubbles in the tub popped and fizzed for a few seconds.
    • I took a gulp of pop and rubbed my nose to get rid of the bubbles fizzing up there.
    • It fizzed; it foamed; it had all the trappings of a real experiment.
    • His glass, in front of the candle, writhing flame visible through the clear liquid, illuminating the bubbles spinning and fizzing their way upward.
    • Nathaniel handed Davis a small vile of clear liquid, bubbles fizzing and popping at the top.
    • It fizzed up over the top, and almost into her lap but she pulled it away so the soda dripped onto the floor.
    • The waters the ship sank into were now bubbling and fizzing with charred metal.
    • It is best consumed when chilled and should foam and fizz like beer.
    • The mixture bubbled and fizzed and then, with a defying pop, settled into a cloudy blue potion.
    • ‘Mom won't know I took it,’ she thought as she popped the top and it fizzed.
    • When iceberg ice melts quickly, the bubbles released from it make a sound like soda water fizzing.
    Synonyms
    effervesce, sparkle, bubble, froth, foam, seethe
    1. 1.1 Make a buzzing or crackling sound.
      lightning starts to crackle and fizz
      Example sentencesExamples
      • I quickly sat before the fiery red of my flush could be exposed to the entire cafeteria, who only just then were beginning to talk again, the buzz of gossip fizzing on my ears.
      • His jaw was parted wide, and a fizzing crackle hummed from within his throat, like the beginning of a patchy radio transmission.
      • And as a dazzling display of fireworks fizzed and crackled in the night sky, a theatrical snow storm added an instant touch of winter to the delight of hundreds of wide-eyed youngsters.
      • A spark fizzed and crackled, and he stepped into the dark opening, light trailing around him, and flames licking the air behind.
      • The 2-1 defeat was thanks in no small part to the backing of a home crowd that fizzed and crackled into the night sky.
      • The only light was from a fizzing yellow overhead lamp that cast a golden glow on Samantha's head.
      • His head filled with buzzes, clicks, pops, fizzes, whirs - then, more strangely, with xylophones and the song of whales.
      • The machines' circuits fizzed and cracked, and finally gave in.
      • The bulb, the standard on its side, fizzed and cracked.
      Synonyms
      crackle, sputter, buzz, hiss, fizzle, crack
    2. 1.2with adverbial Move with or display excitement, exuberance, or liveliness.
      anticipation began to fizz through his veins
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The play fizzes with excitement, sex, uncertainty and tragedy as a result.
      • I sprung for the corridor thankfully and hastily when the doors hissed open, my head still fizzing with the annoying sound of their girlish chatter.
      • Something inside of me started fizzing, bubbling up inside of me.
      • I look forward to the candidate meeting I will attend next week - it's sure to be fizzing with excitement!
      • This raw spectacle overflows with fizzing stories which unveil the chaotic comedy and tragedy behind a flawed wedding reception.
      • He is grinning and fizzing and very excited.
      • Inside she felt like she was fizzing, so many bubble's rising up were rising up now she felt like she might pop.
      • She crackles and fizzes with energy throughout the play.
      • Jane and Denise are visibly fizzing over with excitement about their new career.
      • Players fizzed around the pitch like annoyed wasps, buzzing after the ball (or, more often than not, after the legs of the opposition).
      • Stella was fizzing around the office like a school chemistry experiment gone mad.
      • Elation seemed to bubble and fizz in my throat, and I could only giggle like a silly little girl.
      • Stewart is positively fizzing with excitement.
      • He would sometimes drift off to sleep with these ideas fizzing and bubbling around in the deep drink of his mind.
nounfɪzfiz
  • 1Effervescence.

    the champagne had lost its fizz
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Sparkling water is not so harmful because it contains no sugar and the fizz is less concentrated, Mr Robson added.
    • They are able to keep the fizz inside because the contents of the can are under higher pressure.
    • One expert calls some champagne that spent almost 50 years underwater in the English Channel absolutely fine, though lacking in fizz.
    • It involves putting yeast and sugar together in a bottle to create fizz.
    • It is this escape of carbon dioxide that gives these drinks their fizz.
    • It's dry with ripe passion fruit and mango flavours finished off with a sherbet fizz.
    • This is what gives the drink it's fizz and what gives it that lively taste.
    • The researchers say the same principal applies to any drink that gets its fizz from carbon dioxide.
    • Sparkling wines should be served in think glasses with straight side or flutes so that the fizz is preserved.
    • But now we are starting to think the 6-pack might just be owned by multi-nationals and be unhealthy, fermenting yellow fizz.
    • None dared to open the seal and experience the fizz.
    • It seems that the bubbles in such drinks do not simply provide fizz, but change the flavor of the drink as well.
    • The crucial factor in the quality of every sparkling wine is how the fizz is added.
    • The fizz in soda pop is carbon dioxide dissolved in water.
    • Champagne is supposed to be for romance, I guess because nothing says love like fizz up your nose.
    • This has everything I am looking for in a soda: Grapefruit, natural ingredients, the colour pink and a mild fizz.
    • Spring is the time in her restaurant for rum drinks, cocktails with fruit and drinks with fizz.
    • It isn't the coldness, but the surface of the ice cube itself that creates the fizz.
    • Even there, he says, he heard about his hero only as a chemist - the man who discovered oxygen and invented the use of carbon dioxide to put fizz in drinks.
    • It's quite fruity with green apple, lemon and a delicate, fine fizz.
    Synonyms
    effervescence, sparkle, fizziness, bubbles, bubbliness, gassiness, carbonation, aeration
    1. 1.1informal An effervescent drink, especially sparkling wine.
      a bottle of grapefruit fizz
      Example sentencesExamples
      • It would be difficult to take your bottle of fizz onto the terrace as the review suggests, however, because the bar does not have a terrace.
      • Would you believe in this country we sell 35 million bottles of fizz per year?
      • It was bad enough having to keep her upright what with all that free fizz but once Frank spotted the guest of honour things went from bad to worse.
      • With candles all around the bathroom and a glass of fizz in hand, it was the perfect place to drift off and forget about the outside world.
      • For me fizz, preferably champagne and preferably drunk out of doors, takes the place of lager and there is still plenty of cut-price choice around.
      • But do please help yourself to a glass of fizz.
      • But it was a beautiful evening, so we sat with our fizz at a table outside and watched the sky dim.
      • Salmon pink and beautifully delicate, this fizz has subtle, fruity aromas and strawberry ice-lolly flavours without the sweetness.
      • English fizz is a home-produced wine that you can drink without wincing or blushing.
      • I could have stayed there all day, sipping fizz, denting my credit card irreparably and ruining family relations forever.
      • The sister is planning a visit at the weekend bringing no less than six bottles of wine and fizz for my professional scrutiny.
      • Afterwards about 30 of us went to an Italian deli for pasta, tiramisu and non-stop fizz.
      • No one would be surprised if he chose to celebrate the event with a glass of home-grown fizz.
      • If you're strapped for cash you could try a less expensive bottle of fizz.
      • ‘It is lovely, really nice and warm,’ she said, clutching a goblet of fizz.
      • Far better than any of the cheap, mean, dry fizz.
      • So even when good local fizz came on to the market, the French had been established at the top for some time, and they intended to keep it that way.
      • We passed on a sweet and ordered a second bottle of fizz instead.
      • Now he is opening his own champagne shop and café where people can sit and enjoy a glass of his finest fizz at £4.50 a pop.
      • Tough life, you're probably thinking: he gets to drink fizz all day at someone else's expense.
      Synonyms
      sparkling wine, champagne
    2. 1.2 A buzzing or crackling sound.
      the fizz of 300 sparklers
      Synonyms
      crackle, crackling, buzz, buzzing, hiss, hissing, sizzle, sizzling, crack, sputter, white noise
    3. 1.3 Exuberance or liveliness.
      she saw I had lost some of my fizz
      Example sentencesExamples
      • By then the fizz was largely gone from the home team and the Irish supporters left the ground as they had entered it.
      • All either manager cared about was the lack of fizz in a first half which dragged by.
      • Palpably lacking in fizz, it took some 26 minutes for a shot on goal from either side, another minute before we had one on target.
      • Some kids from the audience joined her on the stage and tried to add fizz.
      • His writing in the 60s which I read in my late schooldays had the urgent fizz of newly discovered and prohibited drugs.
      • It's got some fizz and fun, but looks oddly dated in an 1980s way that hasn't yet become classic.
      • A veritable fizz and sense of revival wafted up and down the Harrogate International Centre's famous circular stairway.
      • But then a few innings into it, he loses his fizz and is like one of the has-beens.
      • You want all the fizz of high fashion, and you want it now.
      • But he has also restored some of fizz to Budget Day.
      • It seems to be one of those words of rock 'n' roll origin that describes the ‘stuff’ inside a person that gives them that extra bit of fizz and sparkle and swagger to get through life.
      • Alas, they have more sax than sex appeal and typify the surprising lack of fizz in their staccato union of song, dance and clipped dialogue.
      • Because they never built the show up to a proper climax, this may have contributed to the lack of fizz in the audience.
      • This film is about a married couple that is nearly perfect on the surface, but has lost some of the fizz underneath.
      • And, adding fizz to the weekend was a dazzling catwalk.
      • All the fizz - such as it is - comes from the market-based think tanks.
      • If we went in at too high a rate, we could face permanent deflationary pressure, taking the fizz out of what is currently the most buoyant large economy in Europe.
      Synonyms
      ebullience, exuberance, liveliness, life, vivacity, animation, vigour, brio, energy, verve, dash, spirit, sparkle, enthusiasm, buoyancy, jauntiness, zest

Origin

Mid 17th century: imitative.

 
 
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