网站首页  词典首页

请输入您要查询的词汇:

 

词汇 minuscule
释义

Definition of minuscule in English:

minuscule

(also miniscule)
adjective ˈmɪnəskjuːl
  • 1Extremely small; tiny.

    非常小的,微小的

    a minuscule fragment of DNA

    极小的DNA片断。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Car nuts will appreciate Capsule Tomica, a series of tiny-but-detailed toy cars that measure about 1.5 inches long and come inside equally minuscule boxes printed with Japanese text.
    • It is much larger than the average minuscule Japanese hotel room, with the convenience of a fully fitted kitchen but without the hassle of having to do the washing-up - dishwashers and housekeeping teams are on hand to take care of all that.
    • The minuscule creatures toil endlessly completely unaware that they are being watched and that, with a simple tap on the glass by the giant undetected observer, what would amount to half a life time's work for an ant could be destroyed.
    • The thought of Pakistan unleashing only theatre nuclear weapons (hence, nuclear safety rooms) is absurd, given the minuscule distances that separate the two countries.
    • Water striders are covered stem to stem and toe to toe with a layer of tiny, waxy, feathery hairs in which countless minuscule air bubbles are trapped.
    • It's not a minuscule scrap of faded black cotton, it's my Preen skirt - which, incidentally, looks great with the Gucci boots I bought while a taxi waited outside en route to a lunch.
    • While at the moment the proportion of the human genome being inserted into the genome of nonhumans is minuscule, at what stage will we start ascribing transgenic animals carrying human genes, the same values we ascribe to humans?
    • Their counterparts are the more poetically named lacecaps, whose papery bracts (flower-like modified leaves) circle a mauve to pink head of minuscule flowers.
    • Currently these businesses contribute a minuscule amount to the total revenues.
    • But he acknowledged global deaths from climate change were minuscule compared with the total number of deaths a year, which the WHO puts at 56 million.
    • Mike Griffin, owner of Honey Martin's on Sherbrooke W., went through a five-year battle to keep music alive at his minuscule bar (which is large enough for a musician or two).
    • Deprived even of the minuscule readership she had once been able to count on, unable to obtain news of her husband and daughter who had been summarily arrested, Tsvetaeva hanged herself two years later, in 1941.
    • They write that Australia's reaction to refugees is not in proportion with the actual number arriving here - which is minuscule compared to that faced by North America and Europe.
    • In his Parisian workshop, the elegant Bartholdi and truly minuscule workers pose next to a gigantic foot or an ear, of which the actual-size mold is shown with the photos.
    • Trainers like them because it means they can justify keeping the horses in their yard and though the prize money is minuscule it's still better than nothing and there's always the chance of a wee betting coup to inflate the income.
    • Some snakes, such as pythons, retain tiny leg bones, which may be visible as minuscule claws at the base of the tail.
    • We see the same hypocrisy when the U.S. military, after dislocating millions of people from their means of sustenance by threatening war, drops a minuscule amount of food packets onto ground riddled with landmines.
    • It wasn't too long ago that Dean was the Rodney Dangerfield of the Democratic race, the long-shot candidate from a minuscule state who didn't get much respect.
    • Upon entering, however, there was a man on a minuscule stage, reading from a tiny index card.
    • There are, though, pointers to be found in minuscule changes of facial expression that may last as little as one twenty-fifth of a second, in speech and tone of voice and perhaps most of all in unconscious gestures.
    Synonyms
    tiny, minute, microscopic, nanoscopic, very small, little, micro, diminutive, miniature, baby, toy, midget, dwarf, pygmy, Lilliputian, infinitesimal
    Scottish wee
    informal teeny, teeny-weeny, teensy, teensy-weensy, weeny, itsy-bitsy, itty-bitty, eensy, eensy-weensy, tiddly
    British informal titchy
    North American informal little-bitty
    1. 1.1informal So small as to be insignificant.
      〈非正式〉小得可忽略不计的;微不足道的
      he believed the risk of infection was minuscule

      他相信感染的危险是极小的。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • I found perhaps a dozen minuscule errors in dates and such, which were passed on to Bill.
      • We have gratuitously destroyed so much of nature that the Taliban's smashing up of Buddhist statues, as comparative vandalism, will someday seem quite minuscule.
      • But Ward, and other scientists, caution that the tsunami risk is minuscule: No such tsunamis of this type have taken place in recorded history.
      • The paralyzing narrowness of American political life, with its minuscule differences between two big business parties, can be traced back to this period.
      • I know there are some issues and problems, but they are minor and minuscule compared with a number of police forces around the world.
      • I don't mean to be sacrilegious here, but in a small, minuscule way trying to keep your own personal opinions out of your reporting is the goal, and it's a goal that one has to continue to be trying to achieve.
      • But if you look at the studies, it's pretty hard to make out a case for women in pregnancy experiencing all but the most minuscule possible risk to themselves or their infants.
      • What I'm saying - that it is minuscule compared to what Ken Lay did, compared to what Jack Grubman and the other analysts on Wall Street did that had a real impact on people's lives.
      • My heart rose, in the slight minuscule chance that it was a dream.
      • True, the progress so far is minuscule compared with the problems created by decades of capital flight, abysmal schools, and drug abuse.
      • Popular culture exerts massive levels of negative energy, especially on young people, which overwhelms the minuscule attempts by the aerospace and high-tech industries.
      Synonyms
      slight, minor, unimportant, trifling, trivial, insignificant, inconsequential, inappreciable, inconsiderable, negligible, nugatory, paltry, infinitesimal
  • 2Of or in lower-case letters, as distinct from capitals or uncials.

    (字母)小写的

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The small (minuscule) letters are earth symbols- the (majuscule) capital letter A is a picture of the missing capstone from Khufu's pyramid.
    • Here for the first time it became common to mix both majuscule and minuscule letters in a single text.
    1. 2.1 Of or in a small cursive script of the Roman alphabet, with ascenders and descenders, developed in the 7th century AD.
      罗马花体小写字母的
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Irish writings prior to the use of paper and print were written on vellum in a distinctive minuscule script which reflects 1,000 years of literary tradition.
      • Speed of writing changed the appearance of many letters, however, and along with the introduction by the 4th century of loops and linking of letters this formed the basis for the development of minuscule scripts.
      • Because minuscules are generally later than uncials, and also because they were easier to produce, minuscule copies outnumber uncials of the New Testament in a ratio of ten to one.
      • Most of the works of the ancient Greek mathematicians which have survived do so because of this copying process and it is the ‘latest’ version written in minuscule script which has survived.
noun ˈmɪnəskjuːl
mass noun
  • 1Minuscule script.

    小写字体

    the humanistic hands of the 15th century were based on the Carolingian minuscule
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Not one of them is written in the type of small, utilitarian script, called current minuscule, which was the common form of handwriting used in liturgical handbooks and schoolbooks in the seventh and eighth centuries.
    • From the late 8th century onwards a new script, Caroline minuscule, swept throughout Europe along with the Carolingian Empire.
    • A process of turning the old unspaced capital scripts into minuscule began and much of the mathematical writing which have survived have done so because they were copied into this new format.
    • The development of Carolingian minuscule had, although somewhat indirectly, a large impact on the history of mathematics.
    • The Caroline minuscule, however, had a relatively weak impact on the writing habits of Italian notaries, who remained faithful to the cursive style.
    • As in Rome, this development ended with graffiti that used script in an unstructured and disorganized way, in which ‘aristocratic’ scripts stood side by side with uncials or minuscules of various derivations.
    • The letters of the new script, called the Carolingian minuscule, were written in upper and lower case, with punctuation and words were separated.
    1. 1.1count noun A small or lower-case letter.
      小写字母
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Working on maps and charts provided testing requirements, both for large and decorative majuscules in the titles, and for tiny minuscules for the names of towns, of which there could be as many as 500 in one county.
      • The written and printed form of English has two interlocking systems of letters: large letters, known variously as capitals, upper-case letters, majuscules, and small letters, or lower-case letters, minuscules.

Usage

The standard spelling is minuscule rather than miniscule. The latter form is a very common one (accounting for almost half of citations for the term in the Oxford English Corpus), and has been recorded since the late 19th century. It arose by analogy with other words beginning with mini-, where the meaning is similarly ‘very small’. It is now so widely used that it can be considered as an acceptable variant, although it should be avoided in formal contexts

Derivatives

  • minuscular

    小写字体

  • adjective mɪˈnʌskjʊlə
    • I know my eyes couldn't deal with the minuscular iPod screen, but I guess there are some younger than I who don't mind it.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • In other words, the occurrence of the fiber dirt caused by the deposition of minuscular ceramic fiber debris onto the surface of the material to be fired is about 1/100 of that in the comparative example.
      • Hence you will receive a signal coming from inside the material as well, but it is minuscular.
      • Are Nigerians and the character of Nigerian politics really different from their minuscular counterpart at the University of Nigeria?
      • Yet, in between the constant switches from inner to outer, there are minuscular pauses.

Origin

Early 18th century: from French, from Latin minuscula (littera) 'somewhat smaller (letter)'.

Definition of minuscule in US English:

minuscule

(also miniscule)
adjective
  • 1Extremely small; tiny.

    非常小的,微小的

    a minuscule fragment of DNA

    极小的DNA片断。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • We see the same hypocrisy when the U.S. military, after dislocating millions of people from their means of sustenance by threatening war, drops a minuscule amount of food packets onto ground riddled with landmines.
    • Currently these businesses contribute a minuscule amount to the total revenues.
    • It's not a minuscule scrap of faded black cotton, it's my Preen skirt - which, incidentally, looks great with the Gucci boots I bought while a taxi waited outside en route to a lunch.
    • Car nuts will appreciate Capsule Tomica, a series of tiny-but-detailed toy cars that measure about 1.5 inches long and come inside equally minuscule boxes printed with Japanese text.
    • But he acknowledged global deaths from climate change were minuscule compared with the total number of deaths a year, which the WHO puts at 56 million.
    • Mike Griffin, owner of Honey Martin's on Sherbrooke W., went through a five-year battle to keep music alive at his minuscule bar (which is large enough for a musician or two).
    • The minuscule creatures toil endlessly completely unaware that they are being watched and that, with a simple tap on the glass by the giant undetected observer, what would amount to half a life time's work for an ant could be destroyed.
    • In his Parisian workshop, the elegant Bartholdi and truly minuscule workers pose next to a gigantic foot or an ear, of which the actual-size mold is shown with the photos.
    • It wasn't too long ago that Dean was the Rodney Dangerfield of the Democratic race, the long-shot candidate from a minuscule state who didn't get much respect.
    • Their counterparts are the more poetically named lacecaps, whose papery bracts (flower-like modified leaves) circle a mauve to pink head of minuscule flowers.
    • The thought of Pakistan unleashing only theatre nuclear weapons (hence, nuclear safety rooms) is absurd, given the minuscule distances that separate the two countries.
    • They write that Australia's reaction to refugees is not in proportion with the actual number arriving here - which is minuscule compared to that faced by North America and Europe.
    • Water striders are covered stem to stem and toe to toe with a layer of tiny, waxy, feathery hairs in which countless minuscule air bubbles are trapped.
    • Trainers like them because it means they can justify keeping the horses in their yard and though the prize money is minuscule it's still better than nothing and there's always the chance of a wee betting coup to inflate the income.
    • While at the moment the proportion of the human genome being inserted into the genome of nonhumans is minuscule, at what stage will we start ascribing transgenic animals carrying human genes, the same values we ascribe to humans?
    • Upon entering, however, there was a man on a minuscule stage, reading from a tiny index card.
    • It is much larger than the average minuscule Japanese hotel room, with the convenience of a fully fitted kitchen but without the hassle of having to do the washing-up - dishwashers and housekeeping teams are on hand to take care of all that.
    • Deprived even of the minuscule readership she had once been able to count on, unable to obtain news of her husband and daughter who had been summarily arrested, Tsvetaeva hanged herself two years later, in 1941.
    • Some snakes, such as pythons, retain tiny leg bones, which may be visible as minuscule claws at the base of the tail.
    • There are, though, pointers to be found in minuscule changes of facial expression that may last as little as one twenty-fifth of a second, in speech and tone of voice and perhaps most of all in unconscious gestures.
    Synonyms
    tiny, minute, microscopic, nanoscopic, very small, little, micro, diminutive, miniature, baby, toy, midget, dwarf, pygmy, lilliputian, infinitesimal
    1. 1.1informal So small as to be negligible or insufficient.
      〈非正式〉小得可忽略不计的;微不足道的
      he believed the risk of infection was minuscule

      他相信感染的危险是极小的。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • Popular culture exerts massive levels of negative energy, especially on young people, which overwhelms the minuscule attempts by the aerospace and high-tech industries.
      • I know there are some issues and problems, but they are minor and minuscule compared with a number of police forces around the world.
      • But Ward, and other scientists, caution that the tsunami risk is minuscule: No such tsunamis of this type have taken place in recorded history.
      • My heart rose, in the slight minuscule chance that it was a dream.
      • The paralyzing narrowness of American political life, with its minuscule differences between two big business parties, can be traced back to this period.
      • But if you look at the studies, it's pretty hard to make out a case for women in pregnancy experiencing all but the most minuscule possible risk to themselves or their infants.
      • We have gratuitously destroyed so much of nature that the Taliban's smashing up of Buddhist statues, as comparative vandalism, will someday seem quite minuscule.
      • I found perhaps a dozen minuscule errors in dates and such, which were passed on to Bill.
      • True, the progress so far is minuscule compared with the problems created by decades of capital flight, abysmal schools, and drug abuse.
      • I don't mean to be sacrilegious here, but in a small, minuscule way trying to keep your own personal opinions out of your reporting is the goal, and it's a goal that one has to continue to be trying to achieve.
      • What I'm saying - that it is minuscule compared to what Ken Lay did, compared to what Jack Grubman and the other analysts on Wall Street did that had a real impact on people's lives.
      Synonyms
      slight, minor, unimportant, trifling, trivial, insignificant, inconsequential, inappreciable, inconsiderable, negligible, nugatory, paltry, infinitesimal
  • 2Of or in lowercase letters, as distinct from capitals or uncials.

    (字母)小写的

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The small (minuscule) letters are earth symbols- the (majuscule) capital letter A is a picture of the missing capstone from Khufu's pyramid.
    • Here for the first time it became common to mix both majuscule and minuscule letters in a single text.
    1. 2.1 Of or in a small cursive script of the Roman alphabet, with ascenders and descenders, developed in the 7th century AD.
      罗马花体小写字母的
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Because minuscules are generally later than uncials, and also because they were easier to produce, minuscule copies outnumber uncials of the New Testament in a ratio of ten to one.
      • Speed of writing changed the appearance of many letters, however, and along with the introduction by the 4th century of loops and linking of letters this formed the basis for the development of minuscule scripts.
      • Most of the works of the ancient Greek mathematicians which have survived do so because of this copying process and it is the ‘latest’ version written in minuscule script which has survived.
      • Irish writings prior to the use of paper and print were written on vellum in a distinctive minuscule script which reflects 1,000 years of literary tradition.
noun
  • 1Minuscule script.

    小写字体

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The development of Carolingian minuscule had, although somewhat indirectly, a large impact on the history of mathematics.
    • The letters of the new script, called the Carolingian minuscule, were written in upper and lower case, with punctuation and words were separated.
    • From the late 8th century onwards a new script, Caroline minuscule, swept throughout Europe along with the Carolingian Empire.
    • Not one of them is written in the type of small, utilitarian script, called current minuscule, which was the common form of handwriting used in liturgical handbooks and schoolbooks in the seventh and eighth centuries.
    • As in Rome, this development ended with graffiti that used script in an unstructured and disorganized way, in which ‘aristocratic’ scripts stood side by side with uncials or minuscules of various derivations.
    • A process of turning the old unspaced capital scripts into minuscule began and much of the mathematical writing which have survived have done so because they were copied into this new format.
    • The Caroline minuscule, however, had a relatively weak impact on the writing habits of Italian notaries, who remained faithful to the cursive style.
    1. 1.1 A small or lowercase letter.
      小写字母
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The written and printed form of English has two interlocking systems of letters: large letters, known variously as capitals, upper-case letters, majuscules, and small letters, or lower-case letters, minuscules.
      • Working on maps and charts provided testing requirements, both for large and decorative majuscules in the titles, and for tiny minuscules for the names of towns, of which there could be as many as 500 in one county.

Usage

The standard spelling is minuscule rather than miniscule. The latter form is a very common one (accounting for almost half of citations for the term in the Oxford English Corpus), and has been recorded since the late 19th century. It arose by analogy with other words beginning with mini-, where the meaning is similarly ‘very small.’ It is now so widely used that it can be considered as an acceptable variant, although it should be avoided in formal contexts

Origin

Early 18th century: from French, from Latin minuscula (littera) ‘somewhat smaller (letter)’.

随便看

 

春雷网英语在线翻译词典收录了464360条英语词汇在线翻译词条,基本涵盖了全部常用英语词汇的中英文双语翻译及用法,是英语学习的有利工具。

 

Copyright © 2000-2024 Sndmkt.com All Rights Reserved 更新时间:2024/12/28 4:14:23