| 释义 | 
		raucous /ˈrɔːkəs  /adjectiveMaking or constituting a disturbingly harsh and loud noise: raucous youths...- Suddenly, Nicky began to laugh, a loud and raucous sound it was, almost making you feel ashamed to be next to him.
 - They ended their set by standing on their amps and jumped off them while playing one loud raucous power chord.
 - It's a big, bad, wonderful city - loud, raucous, and nasty, but it's also kind and dear.
 
 Synonyms harsh, strident, screeching, squawky, squawking, sharp, grating, discordant, dissonant, inharmonious, unmelodious, jarring, brassy; rough, rasping, husky, hoarse, scratchy; noisy, loud, piercing, shrill, ear-splitting, penetrating, clamorous, cacophonous rowdy, noisy, boisterous, roisterous, unruly, disorderly, wild   Derivatives raucously /ˈrɔːkəsli  / adverb ...- For local entertainment you would have to hire the raucously energetic rock group that rehearses in the village hall.
 - You start laughing raucously, almost manically.
 - Two waiters come running, but the girls are deep into battle now, laughing raucously as the entire restaurant turns to look.
 
 raucousness /ˈrɔːkəsnəs  / noun ...- Perhaps I haven't been in the right places at the right times, but there was none of the raucousness of Edinburgh on a Saturday night.
 - There is an energy about her that dances erratically, a kind of life-enhancing raucousness that makes the onlooker feel just a bit more alive.
 - Everyone sings the bits they know with gusto and extreme raucousness.
 
 Origin Mid 18th century: from Latin raucus 'hoarse' + -ous. Rhymes caucus, Dorcas, glaucous  |