释义 |
WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2024de•tailed (di tāld′, dē′tāld),USA pronunciation adj. - having many details:a detailed problem.
- thorough in the treatment of details; minute:a detailed report.
de•tailed•ly (di tāld′lē, -tā′lid-),USA pronunciation adv. de•tailed′ness, n. - 1.See corresponding entry in Unabridged . involved, complex, complicated.
- 2.See corresponding entry in Unabridged . itemized, particularized; exhaustive, thorough, comprehensive.
Collins Concise English Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers:: detailed /ˈdiːteɪld/ adj - having many details or giving careful attention to details: a detailed list of the ingredients required
WordReference Random House Learner's Dictionary of American English © 2024de•tail /dɪˈteɪl, ˈditeɪl/USA pronunciation n. - a piece or item of a whole:[countable]The picture he drew was perfect in every detail.
- particular or individual parts, taken as a group:[uncountable]his attention to detail.
- complicated decoration created with great care and attention:[uncountable]the careful detail in those tiny statues.
- a small section of a larger whole, esp. of a photograph magnified to show what the eye would not otherwise be able to see:[countable]A close-up detail of the rocket launcher showed where the faulty hose was connected.
- Military an individual or group selected for a special task, or the task itself:[countable]the kitchen detail.
v. [~ + object] - to mention one by one;
list fully:The employees were asked to detail their complaints. - Militaryto appoint or assign (soldiers) for duty:A squad was detailed to find the deserters and bring them to the captain.
Idioms- Idioms in detail, item by item:We went into each complaint in detail.
de•tailed, adj. : a detailed explanation.See -tail-. WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2024de•tail (n. di tāl′, dē′tāl;v. di tāl′),USA pronunciation n. - an individual or minute part;
an item or particular. - particulars collectively;
minutiae. - attention to or treatment of a subject in individual or minute parts:to postpone detail and concentrate on a subject as a whole.
- intricate, finely wrought decoration.
- [Engin.]See detail drawing.
- any small section of a larger structure or whole, considered as a unit.
- Military
- Militaryan appointment or assignment, as of a small group or an officer, for a special task.
- the party or person so selected:the kitchen detail.
- a particular assignment of duty.
- the property of an image or of a method of image production to make small, closely spaced image elements individually distinguishable.
- Idioms in detail, item by item;
with particulars:The résumé stated his qualifications in detail. v.t. - to relate or report with complete particulars;
tell fully and distinctly. - to mention one by one;
specify; list:He detailed the events leading up to the robbery. - Militaryto appoint or assign for some particular duty:We were detailed to patrol the border.
- to provide with intricate, finely wrought decoration:lingerie detailed with lace and embroidery.
- Vulgar Latin *taliāre; see tailor
- French détail, Old French, noun, nominal derivative of detailler to cut in pieces, equivalent. to de- dis-1 + tailler to cut
- 1595–1605
- 11.See corresponding entry in Unabridged itemize, enumerate, catalog.
Collins Concise English Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers:: detail /ˈdiːteɪl/ n - an item or smaller part that is considered separately; particular
- an item or circumstance that is insignificant or unimportant: passengers' comfort was regarded as a detail
- treatment of or attention to items or particulars: this essay includes too much detail
- items collectively; particulars
- a small or accessory section or element in a painting, building, statue, etc, esp when considered in isolation
- the act of assigning personnel for a specific duty, esp a fatigue
- the personnel selected
- the duty or assignment
- go into detail ⇒ to include all or most particulars
- in detail ⇒ including all or most particulars or items thoroughly
vb (transitive)- to list or relate fully
- to select (personnel) for a specific duty
Etymology: 17th Century: from French détail, from Old French detailler to cut in pieces, from de- dis-1 + tailler to cut; see tailor |