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词汇 disruptive
释义

Definition of disruptive in English:

disruptive

adjective dɪsˈrʌptɪvdɪsˈrəptɪv
  • 1Causing or tending to cause disruption.

    制造混乱的;破坏的

    disruptive pupils

    捣乱的学生。

    the hours of work are disruptive to home life

    数小时的工作会扰乱家庭生活。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • There is no meaningful inclusion for the disruptive pupil, and it is not rewarding nor satisfying for staff.
    • Many teachers are also angry at what they claim is a lack of funding for support to deal with disruptive pupils.
    • It recently balloted its members on the refusal to teach a pupil who had a long-term record of disruptive behaviour.
    • The disruptive behaviour of a small minority of pupils can wreak havoc in the classrooms and corridors.
    • A more straightforward, and less disruptive, solution to this problem would be to make the tests harder.
    • A dedicated post to tackle disruptive behaviour on council estates will be created by Kingston Council.
    • Goddard admits that his disruptive behaviour was akin to engaging in battle and resulted in his expulsion.
    • His behaviour was disruptive and he was arrested for motoring offences.
    • So the source of destructive and disruptive black behaviour is not in their culture.
    • There's been no prolonged bad weather so it's been less disruptive than normal.
    • Parents of disruptive pupils have somehow to be involved positively.
    • It is also meant to avoid the disruptive ethnic divisions that reside in partisan politics.
    • The pupils said the boy was known for his disruptive behaviour and had been acting up in the lesson that day.
    • Their disruptive behaviour means that they often miss much of the teaching that is going on.
    • At an early age he began to show signs of stubborn and disruptive behavior.
    • They have brought these children up to be disruptive and offensive.
    • It is disruptive of received ways of understanding the world or even of other places.
    • Teachers said he was disruptive and his behaviour put other pupils at risk.
    • Girls are responsible for a worrying surge in violent, bullying and disruptive behaviour in York schools.
    • In this case, the family have agreed to reform their disruptive behaviour in a pioneering legal deal.
    Synonyms
    troublemaking, troublesome, unruly, rowdy, disorderly, undisciplined, attention-seeking, riotous, wild, turbulent
    unmanageable, uncontrollable, out of control/hand, unrestrained, obstreperous, truculent, fractious, divisive
    badly behaved, misbehaving, errant, uncooperative, rebellious
    disturbing, distracting, unsettling, upsetting, noisy, raucous
    formal refractory
    1. 1.1 Innovative or groundbreaking.
      创新的,革新;开拓性的,别出机杼的
      breaking a disruptive technology into the market is never easy

      向市场推广创新技术从来都不是容易的事。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • Currently, we are experiencing a disruptive period which should be viewed in the larger evolutionary spectrum.
      • Her clever ruse contrasts the disruptive force of the historical moment at hand.
      • This chapter also introduces a third contextual dimension to the disruptive innovation model introduced in Dilemma.
      • That's the disruptive idea behind the awe-inspiring Eden Project.
      • This column is mainly about how to properly manage the introduction of a disruptive technology, which is harder than most people would guess.
      • You have said that you want to take a disruptive approach in North America.
      • Rising mental illness seems an inescapable consequence of the kind of rapid, disruptive change driven by market capitalism.
      • Goodbye, portals, you were just dealt a death-defying blow from a (new) disruptive technology.
      • It is pellucidly obvious that technologies - like the invention of the internal combustion engine or the written word - are disruptive.
      • Disruptive innovation can create or destroy the market for entire product lines.
      • The capital is allowing disruptive technologies to flourish.
      • However, a disruptive technology or innovation has emerged that supports a potential revolution to reverse that trend in a dramatic way.
      • Vendors with disruptive upgrades and maintenance strategies will be at a major competitive disadvantage as new games for maintenance and upgrades drive new rules.
      • Because disruptive innovations often see failure before success, flexibility is critical to survival.
      • It's also a disruptive technology where you have to re-engineer your environment.
      • As Reiter points out, the resolution is getting better very quickly (and this follows the classic disruptive technology trend lines).
      • For a while, it looks like the movie will use the "pay it forward" idea to examine the disruptive power of compassion.
      • This includes even those ' disruptive ' technologies that replace older ones (cars v horse buggies, compact disc v cassette tape, etc).
      Synonyms
      innovative, inventive, ingenious, original, innovatory, innovational, new, novel, fresh, unconventional, unorthodox, off-centre, unusual, unfamiliar, unprecedented, avant-garde, experimental
      groundbreaking, pioneering, trailblazing, revolutionary, radical, advanced, newfangled, modern, modernistic, ultra-modern, state-of-the-art, futuristic
      rare new-fashioned, neoteric

Derivatives

  • disruptively

  • adverbdɪsˈrʌptɪvlidɪsˈrəptəvli
    • But the latter strove disruptively for extreme changes in religion and the law, until the moderate majority, to Cromwell's relief, staged a walk-out on 12 December and resigned their authority back into his hands.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • So even though IP telephony is a potentially disruptive technology for the marketplace, it doesn't act disruptively in people's lives.
      • Some of this oxygen was converted into ozone and the developing ozone layer gave needed protection from disruptively energetic ultraviolet radiation.
      • Much of what Reed writes here seems accurate, though again he is distracted by the desire to find in this detail a disruptively textual aspect.
      • What nobody has done yet, though, is to extrapolate these plans into other crisis areas where too many reporters chomp around disruptively in too little space.
  • disruptiveness

  • noundɪsˈrʌptɪvnəsdɪsˈrəptɪvnəs
    • All evidence points towards its disruptiveness and the fact that the organization and its leadership was not a part of the freedom struggle.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Can you disaggregate the student's disruptiveness from his being out of step with the rest of the class?
      • It is a suicidal folly to condone, much less encourage, any anarchic agenda, overlooking its disruptiveness in the national context.
      • Common sense in a capitalist system tends to dictate the importance of the former and the disruptiveness of the latter.
      • Does giftedness sometimes lead to an uncooperative attitude or disruptiveness?

Definition of disruptive in US English:

disruptive

adjectivedisˈrəptivdɪsˈrəptɪv
  • 1Causing or tending to cause disruption.

    制造混乱的;破坏的

    the hours of work are disruptive to home life

    数小时的工作会扰乱家庭生活。

    disruptive and delinquent children
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Many teachers are also angry at what they claim is a lack of funding for support to deal with disruptive pupils.
    • They have brought these children up to be disruptive and offensive.
    • Their disruptive behaviour means that they often miss much of the teaching that is going on.
    • At an early age he began to show signs of stubborn and disruptive behavior.
    • So the source of destructive and disruptive black behaviour is not in their culture.
    • It is disruptive of received ways of understanding the world or even of other places.
    • The pupils said the boy was known for his disruptive behaviour and had been acting up in the lesson that day.
    • A more straightforward, and less disruptive, solution to this problem would be to make the tests harder.
    • A dedicated post to tackle disruptive behaviour on council estates will be created by Kingston Council.
    • There is no meaningful inclusion for the disruptive pupil, and it is not rewarding nor satisfying for staff.
    • His behaviour was disruptive and he was arrested for motoring offences.
    • Goddard admits that his disruptive behaviour was akin to engaging in battle and resulted in his expulsion.
    • There's been no prolonged bad weather so it's been less disruptive than normal.
    • It recently balloted its members on the refusal to teach a pupil who had a long-term record of disruptive behaviour.
    • The disruptive behaviour of a small minority of pupils can wreak havoc in the classrooms and corridors.
    • Teachers said he was disruptive and his behaviour put other pupils at risk.
    • In this case, the family have agreed to reform their disruptive behaviour in a pioneering legal deal.
    • Parents of disruptive pupils have somehow to be involved positively.
    • Girls are responsible for a worrying surge in violent, bullying and disruptive behaviour in York schools.
    • It is also meant to avoid the disruptive ethnic divisions that reside in partisan politics.
    Synonyms
    troublemaking, troublesome, unruly, rowdy, disorderly, undisciplined, attention-seeking, riotous, wild, turbulent
    1. 1.1 Innovative or groundbreaking.
      创新的,革新;开拓性的,别出机杼的
      breaking a disruptive technology into the market is never easy

      向市场推广创新技术从来都不是容易的事。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • Currently, we are experiencing a disruptive period which should be viewed in the larger evolutionary spectrum.
      • It is pellucidly obvious that technologies - like the invention of the internal combustion engine or the written word - are disruptive.
      • Rising mental illness seems an inescapable consequence of the kind of rapid, disruptive change driven by market capitalism.
      • Her clever ruse contrasts the disruptive force of the historical moment at hand.
      • Vendors with disruptive upgrades and maintenance strategies will be at a major competitive disadvantage as new games for maintenance and upgrades drive new rules.
      • This column is mainly about how to properly manage the introduction of a disruptive technology, which is harder than most people would guess.
      • This includes even those ' disruptive ' technologies that replace older ones (cars v horse buggies, compact disc v cassette tape, etc).
      • For a while, it looks like the movie will use the "pay it forward" idea to examine the disruptive power of compassion.
      • The capital is allowing disruptive technologies to flourish.
      • It's also a disruptive technology where you have to re-engineer your environment.
      • Because disruptive innovations often see failure before success, flexibility is critical to survival.
      • That's the disruptive idea behind the awe-inspiring Eden Project.
      • This chapter also introduces a third contextual dimension to the disruptive innovation model introduced in Dilemma.
      • Goodbye, portals, you were just dealt a death-defying blow from a (new) disruptive technology.
      • However, a disruptive technology or innovation has emerged that supports a potential revolution to reverse that trend in a dramatic way.
      • As Reiter points out, the resolution is getting better very quickly (and this follows the classic disruptive technology trend lines).
      • You have said that you want to take a disruptive approach in North America.
      • Disruptive innovation can create or destroy the market for entire product lines.
      Synonyms
      innovative, inventive, ingenious, original, innovatory, innovational, new, novel, fresh, unconventional, unorthodox, off-centre, unusual, unfamiliar, unprecedented, avant-garde, experimental
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