| 释义 |
hor·ri·ble I. \ˈhȯrəbəl, ˈhär-\ adjective Etymology: Middle English orrible, horrible, from Middle French, from Latin horribilis, from horrēre to bristle, tremble, shudder + -ibilis -ible — more at horror 1. : marked by or conducive to horror : likely to arouse fear, dread, or abhorrence < coconuts in the horrible likeness of a head shrunken by headhunters — Sinclair Lewis > < her hearers derived a horrible enjoyment from … her wrath — Charles Dickens > 2. : extremely unpleasant or disagreeable : conducive to feelings of acute dislike, disgust, or repulsion < of all horrors in this blessed town, snow is the most horrible — W.M.Thackeray > < the weather is always horrible when I travel — Aldous Huxley > Synonyms: see fearful II. adverb Etymology: Middle English orrible, horrible, from orrible, horrible, adjective : to an extreme degree : horribly, exceedingly < she was horrible mad > III. noun (-s) Etymology: horrible (I) : a horrible person or thing; specifically : a person fantastically garbed (as for a masquerade or holiday parade) — usually used in plural < the horribles, grotesquely costumed children, will parade along a few … streets — Time > — see antiques and horribles |