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单词 inundate
释义

Definition of inundate in English:

inundate

verb ˈɪnʌndeɪtˈɪnənˌdeɪt
[with object]
  • 1Overwhelm (someone) with things or people to be dealt with.

    we've been inundated with complaints from listeners
    Example sentencesExamples
    • In a world where people are inundated with information from the media this seems naive.
    • In our society we are inundated with images of beautiful people endorsing beauty products.
    • We were inundated with requests, and five readers were chosen to undergo the test which costs £245.
    • We are inundated with emails and phone calls asking us why we didn't confirm Tung's resignation earlier?
    • Soon, Elizabeth was inundated with requests and decided to throw herself into a new business opportunity.
    • He was inundated with phone calls of congratulations during the week.
    • We were inundated with entries and several lucky readers won a free test, which normally costs £245.
    • I was inundated with responses from readers congratulating me for ‘what good sense you talk’.
    • Since the newspaper staff is inundated with these letters everyday, they have no choice but to publish at least some of them.
    • You may be surprised to learn that we are not inundated with complaints from people living in the surrounding area there is no trouble.
    • As Digital Media Manager I am inundated with press releases everyday proclaiming that this or that website is the next big thing.
    • Tall and blonde, she was instantly inundated with responses.
    • We were inundated with requests from people to help them find their transport.
    • Instead, I am consistently inundated with requests to return with cartons of Canadian cigarettes.
    • Gail faxes to say she is inundated with phone calls and people in the street passing on their support.
    • As Alain de Botton observes in The Art Of Travel, we are inundated with advice on where to travel, but hear very little of why and how we should go.
    • We were inundated with responses, and judges had a tough decision whittling down the entries to a short-list of five.
    • Viewers were inundated with banners and buttons resulting in overload and cynicism.
    • When the residents of Milnrow and Newhey heard he was finishing, he was inundated with cards and gifts from well-wishers.
    • During the nail biting night, he was inundated with a staggering 140 text messages from well wishers.
    Synonyms
    overwhelm, overpower, overburden, overrun, overload, swamp, bog down, besiege, snow under, bury, bombard, glut
  • 2Flood.

    the islands may be the first to be inundated as sea levels rise
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Four more people drowned in eastern India on Wednesday and an overflowing river threatened to inundate low-lying areas around Patna, the populous capital city of Bihar state, relief officials said yesterday.
    • It was 1956 and the Murray had burst its banks in the great floods of that year, inundating the main street and its surrounds, devastating buildings and cutting people off from facilities like electricity.
    • The God of the Bible has given us an eyewitness report of His works, and He warns us that we are accountable for our deeds - as He proved by inundating the whole world with a Flood in Noah's day.
    • In successful nesting seasons, when floods did not inundate the nesting ground and predation was not severe, many young titanosaurs would survive.
    • More than a dozen people died in Texas in early June after flood waters inundated the state.
    • This site could more effectively control floods and would not inundate park land.
    • The building of the canal is expected to control the annual floods that inundate many parts of the capital, causing much loss of life and property.
    • The heavy rain since Thursday has also caused flooding in many other parts of the city, inundating thousands of buildings.
    • Here in Naples, Hurricane Wilma caused flooding, including inundating a parking garage.
    • The seasonally inundated plain habitat covered the remainder of the floodplain, except for the permanently wet areas.
    • The area was badly damaged in 1996 by a flood of the muddy Liu River that inundated four-fifths of the city.
    • At least 50 dead as floods inundate much of Jakarta
    • Most flood-control projects involve widening, deepening and straightening channels so they can hold a larger volume of water before they can inundate adjacent flood plains.
    • In March 1864 the Bradfield Reservoir of the Sheffield Waterworks Company failed, inundating the Loxley valley and flooding parts of Sheffield to a depth of nine feet.
    • Flash floods, of the kind which suddenly and without warning inundate a whole town under many feet of swirling water, only occur in mountainous areas or where dams break creating a tidal wave.
    • The Ings, one of the flood defences for York, is inundated, and farmer Chris Kirby woke this morning to find his farm submerged.
    • This is particularly important in low-lying countries such as Bangladesh, where a one-metre rise in sea level would inundate half of the country's rice land with saltwater.
    • The majority of the rivers overflow and inundate roads and houses.
    • The habitat is seasonally inundated, and flood scouring appeared to occur on a periodic basis.
    • When the precipitation rate increases in Brazil, Paraguay and Argentina, floods inundate southern China and Bangladesh and drought hits some of the remotest Indian villages.
    Synonyms
    flood, deluge, overflow, overrun, swamp, submerge, engulf, drown, immerse, cover
    saturate, soak, drench

Origin

Late 16th century: (earlier (late Middle English) as inundation) from Latin inundat- 'flooded', from the verb inundare, from in- 'into, upon' + undare 'to flow' (from unda 'a wave').

  • water from Old English:

    The people living around the Black Sea more than 5 000 years ago had a word for water. We do not know exactly what it was, but it was probably the source for the words used for ‘water’ in many European languages, past and present. In Old English it was wæter. The Greek was hudōr, the source of words like hydraulic (mid 17th century) and hydrotherapy (late 19th century). The same root led to the formation of Latin unda ‘wave’, as in inundate (late 18th century), abound (Middle English) (from Latin abundare ‘overflow’), and undulate (mid 17th century), Russian voda (the source of vodka), German Wasser, and the English words wet (Old English) and otter (Old English). Of the first water means ‘unsurpassed’. The three highest grades into which diamonds or pearls could be classified used to be called waters, but only first water, the top one, is found today, describing a completely flawless gem. An equivalent term is found in many European languages, and all are thought to come from the Arabic word for water, , which also meant ‘shine or splendour’, presumably from the appearance of very pure water. People and things other than gems began to be described as of the first water in the 1820s. Nowadays the phrase is rarely used as a compliment: in a letter written in 1950, P.G. Wodehouse commented disparagingly on J. M. Barrie's play The Admirable Crichton: ‘I remember being entranced with it in 1904 or whenever it was, but now it seems like a turkey of the first water.’ If you study a duck shaking its wings after diving for food you will see the point of water off a duck's back, used since the 1820s of a potentially hurtful remark that has no apparent effect. The water forms into beads and simply slides off the bird's waterproof feathers, leaving the duck dry. Water under the bridge refers to events that are in the past and should no longer to be regarded as important. Similar phrases are recorded since the beginning of the 20th century. A North American variant is water over the dam. The first uses of waterlogged, in the late 18th century, referred to ships that were so flooded with water that they became heavy and unmanageable, and no better than a log floating in the sea. A watershed, a ridge of land that separates waters flowing to different rivers or seas, has nothing to do with garden sheds but means ‘ridge of high ground’ and is connected with shed (Old English) meaning ‘discard’.

 
 

Definition of inundate in US English:

inundate

verbˈɪnənˌdeɪtˈinənˌdāt
[with object]
  • 1Overwhelm (someone) with things or people to be dealt with.

    we've been inundated with complaints from listeners
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Tall and blonde, she was instantly inundated with responses.
    • I was inundated with responses from readers congratulating me for ‘what good sense you talk’.
    • We were inundated with requests from people to help them find their transport.
    • As Digital Media Manager I am inundated with press releases everyday proclaiming that this or that website is the next big thing.
    • Since the newspaper staff is inundated with these letters everyday, they have no choice but to publish at least some of them.
    • Instead, I am consistently inundated with requests to return with cartons of Canadian cigarettes.
    • Soon, Elizabeth was inundated with requests and decided to throw herself into a new business opportunity.
    • We were inundated with requests, and five readers were chosen to undergo the test which costs £245.
    • We were inundated with entries and several lucky readers won a free test, which normally costs £245.
    • We are inundated with emails and phone calls asking us why we didn't confirm Tung's resignation earlier?
    • He was inundated with phone calls of congratulations during the week.
    • When the residents of Milnrow and Newhey heard he was finishing, he was inundated with cards and gifts from well-wishers.
    • Viewers were inundated with banners and buttons resulting in overload and cynicism.
    • As Alain de Botton observes in The Art Of Travel, we are inundated with advice on where to travel, but hear very little of why and how we should go.
    • In our society we are inundated with images of beautiful people endorsing beauty products.
    • You may be surprised to learn that we are not inundated with complaints from people living in the surrounding area there is no trouble.
    • We were inundated with responses, and judges had a tough decision whittling down the entries to a short-list of five.
    • Gail faxes to say she is inundated with phone calls and people in the street passing on their support.
    • In a world where people are inundated with information from the media this seems naive.
    • During the nail biting night, he was inundated with a staggering 140 text messages from well wishers.
    Synonyms
    overwhelm, overpower, overburden, overrun, overload, swamp, bog down, besiege, snow under, bury, bombard, glut
  • 2Flood.

    the islands may be the first to be inundated as sea levels rise
    Example sentencesExamples
    • The Ings, one of the flood defences for York, is inundated, and farmer Chris Kirby woke this morning to find his farm submerged.
    • More than a dozen people died in Texas in early June after flood waters inundated the state.
    • In successful nesting seasons, when floods did not inundate the nesting ground and predation was not severe, many young titanosaurs would survive.
    • At least 50 dead as floods inundate much of Jakarta
    • This site could more effectively control floods and would not inundate park land.
    • The building of the canal is expected to control the annual floods that inundate many parts of the capital, causing much loss of life and property.
    • Four more people drowned in eastern India on Wednesday and an overflowing river threatened to inundate low-lying areas around Patna, the populous capital city of Bihar state, relief officials said yesterday.
    • When the precipitation rate increases in Brazil, Paraguay and Argentina, floods inundate southern China and Bangladesh and drought hits some of the remotest Indian villages.
    • The seasonally inundated plain habitat covered the remainder of the floodplain, except for the permanently wet areas.
    • It was 1956 and the Murray had burst its banks in the great floods of that year, inundating the main street and its surrounds, devastating buildings and cutting people off from facilities like electricity.
    • The heavy rain since Thursday has also caused flooding in many other parts of the city, inundating thousands of buildings.
    • The area was badly damaged in 1996 by a flood of the muddy Liu River that inundated four-fifths of the city.
    • Flash floods, of the kind which suddenly and without warning inundate a whole town under many feet of swirling water, only occur in mountainous areas or where dams break creating a tidal wave.
    • This is particularly important in low-lying countries such as Bangladesh, where a one-metre rise in sea level would inundate half of the country's rice land with saltwater.
    • The God of the Bible has given us an eyewitness report of His works, and He warns us that we are accountable for our deeds - as He proved by inundating the whole world with a Flood in Noah's day.
    • Most flood-control projects involve widening, deepening and straightening channels so they can hold a larger volume of water before they can inundate adjacent flood plains.
    • Here in Naples, Hurricane Wilma caused flooding, including inundating a parking garage.
    • In March 1864 the Bradfield Reservoir of the Sheffield Waterworks Company failed, inundating the Loxley valley and flooding parts of Sheffield to a depth of nine feet.
    • The habitat is seasonally inundated, and flood scouring appeared to occur on a periodic basis.
    • The majority of the rivers overflow and inundate roads and houses.
    Synonyms
    flood, deluge, overflow, overrun, swamp, submerge, engulf, drown, immerse, cover

Origin

Late 16th century: (earlier ( late Middle English) as inundation) from Latin inundat- ‘flooded’, from the verb inundare, from in- ‘into, upon’ + undare ‘to flow’ (from unda ‘a wave’).

 
 
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更新时间:2024/11/10 19:08:41