| 释义 | 
		Definition of cadaverous in English: cadaverousadjective kəˈdav(ə)rəskəˈdæv(ə)rəs Very pale, thin, or bony.  he was gaunt and cadaverous  Example sentencesExamples -  Stubble adorned his thin, cadaverous, scarred face, and remnants of blood stained the ends of his hair.
 -  She is skeletally thin, with hollow, cadaverous eyes and cheeks.
 -  Six foot tall, slim and with a deceptive unassuming air, his blond hair and cadaverous cheek bones say rampant sex drive packaged as boy next door.
 -  When you're about 60, the penalty for remaining rockstar-thin is a cadaverous face and hollow cheeks.
 -  Peter shuffled his cadaverous form into the passenger side while I dumped the last of our provisions in the trunk.
 -  Some bouts of serious illness left him with a cadaverous appearance that only enhanced his charisma.
 -  He further concluded that these cadaverous particles could adhere to the hands of physicians and thus be transferred to the women, thereby transmitting puerperal fever.
 -  One of the lads is looking a bit cadaverous these days.
 -  A lone cadaverous figure standing near a nervous blindfolded donkey was seen centered in the destroyed fields.
 -  Here too, there was an urgent and primal need to manage the dark, yet in our night, tonight, the quiet darkness outside is replaced by a frantic and cadaverous light, and an overheated, yet archaic buzz.
 -  When she looked at him again, her face was cadaverous.
 -  The body's face was cadaverous and melting, the eyes the only prominent feature.
 -  Next to my large and robust American seat mates, I must have looked positively cadaverous.
 -  You understand why he looked cadaverous long before April 3, 2000, when an assassin cut him down.
 -  I couldn't have said whether it was the reflection of the snow or something else that gave his face a sickly, cadaverous tint.
 -  We fine cadaverous fellows do not share your enthusiasm for the sanctity of life, for obvious reasons.
 -  But the cadaverous count does not seem happy about the prospect of moving.
 -  But a cadaverous light does suffuse her brushy work.
 -  Victims suffered from bad breath, a loathsome cadaverous stink from within according to one contemporary, and other symptoms included high fever, acute stomach pains and bluish black spots on the body.
 -  I now have new images whenever I see a cadaverous academic.
 
  Synonyms (deathly) pale, pallid, white, bloodless, ashen, ashen-faced, ashy, chalky, chalk-white, grey, white-faced, whey-faced, waxen, waxy, corpse-like, deathlike, ghostly very thin, as thin as a rake, bony, skeletal, emaciated, skin-and-bones, scrawny, scraggy, raw-boned, haggard, gaunt, drawn, pinched, hollow-cheeked, hollow-eyed informal like death warmed up, like a bag of bones, anorexic dated spindle-shanked rare livid, etiolated, lymphatic, exsanguinous, starveling, macilent 
 Derivatives   adverb  By contrast, he chose to portray the character as ailing: cadaverously thin and pale with flushed cheeks and clawlike fingers.  Example sentencesExamples -  I'm an ectomorph with medium ash brown hair that I'm always ruining by dyeing it (so it always has garish brassy orange tones), brown eyes that I sometimes conceal with grey contacts, and cadaverously fair skin.
 -  Haggard, frayed and cadaverously pale with his eyes sunk somewhere deep in the back of his skull, in the final scene he looks like someone who is about to die.
 -  He works within a narrower spectrum, bringing to life a series of monologues for inter-related and cadaverously fleshed-out dummies.
 -  For a chef, he looks cadaverously under-nourished.
 
 
 noun  Therefore, at the politically upbeat end of the scale, with conflicts, both domestic and international, being resolved, they might well evolve into a minimalist organization, lean perhaps to the point of cadaverousness, based primarily on high technology and special forces, supported by airpower, which many today see as a classical model for the new world.  Example sentencesExamples -  Among the many descriptive phrases used to describe him are these: " [A] cadaverousness of complexion,’ ‘lips somewhat thin and very pallid,’ and ‘an eye large, liquid, and luminous beyond comparison.’
 -  The first thing people will note about the film is the appearance of the actor, who dropped an alleged 63 pounds off of his pumped-up torso to emerge in such a state of rib-bulging cadaverousness that he looks like he just walked out of a concentration camp.
 -  He was a man whose figure promised cadaverousness, but who had an excessively red face, though shaped like a horse's.
 -  His pigmentation is described as ‘[a] cadaverousness of complexion’ and as having a ‘ghastly pallor’.
 
 
 
 Origin   Late Middle English: from Latin cadaverosus, from cadaver 'corpse'.    Definition of cadaverous in US English: cadaverousadjectivekəˈdav(ə)rəskəˈdæv(ə)rəs Resembling a corpse in being very pale, thin, or bony.  he had a cadaverous appearance  Example sentencesExamples -  A lone cadaverous figure standing near a nervous blindfolded donkey was seen centered in the destroyed fields.
 -  You understand why he looked cadaverous long before April 3, 2000, when an assassin cut him down.
 -  When you're about 60, the penalty for remaining rockstar-thin is a cadaverous face and hollow cheeks.
 -  He further concluded that these cadaverous particles could adhere to the hands of physicians and thus be transferred to the women, thereby transmitting puerperal fever.
 -  Victims suffered from bad breath, a loathsome cadaverous stink from within according to one contemporary, and other symptoms included high fever, acute stomach pains and bluish black spots on the body.
 -  The body's face was cadaverous and melting, the eyes the only prominent feature.
 -  We fine cadaverous fellows do not share your enthusiasm for the sanctity of life, for obvious reasons.
 -  Peter shuffled his cadaverous form into the passenger side while I dumped the last of our provisions in the trunk.
 -  When she looked at him again, her face was cadaverous.
 -  I now have new images whenever I see a cadaverous academic.
 -  Next to my large and robust American seat mates, I must have looked positively cadaverous.
 -  But the cadaverous count does not seem happy about the prospect of moving.
 -  Here too, there was an urgent and primal need to manage the dark, yet in our night, tonight, the quiet darkness outside is replaced by a frantic and cadaverous light, and an overheated, yet archaic buzz.
 -  Six foot tall, slim and with a deceptive unassuming air, his blond hair and cadaverous cheek bones say rampant sex drive packaged as boy next door.
 -  Some bouts of serious illness left him with a cadaverous appearance that only enhanced his charisma.
 -  One of the lads is looking a bit cadaverous these days.
 -  She is skeletally thin, with hollow, cadaverous eyes and cheeks.
 -  I couldn't have said whether it was the reflection of the snow or something else that gave his face a sickly, cadaverous tint.
 -  Stubble adorned his thin, cadaverous, scarred face, and remnants of blood stained the ends of his hair.
 -  But a cadaverous light does suffuse her brushy work.
 
  Synonyms pale, deathly pale, pallid, white, bloodless, ashen, ashen-faced, ashy, chalky, chalk-white, grey, white-faced, whey-faced, waxen, waxy, corpse-like, deathlike, ghostly 
 Origin   Late Middle English: from Latin cadaverosus, from cadaver ‘corpse’.     |