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词汇 pandemonium
释义

Definition of pandemonium in English:

pandemonium

noun ˌpandɪˈməʊnɪəmˌpændəˈmoʊniəm
mass noun
  • Wild and noisy disorder or confusion; uproar.

    喧嚣;大混乱

    there was complete pandemonium—everyone just panicked
    Example sentencesExamples
    • I knew that a lack of heir undoubtedly lead to pandemonium and anarchy.
    • There was a lot of screaming, panic and pandemonium.
    • There would be political pandemonium if it were actually proposed, however.
    • It has been pandemonium in Korea this past week, with normally-reserved people giving vent to joyful feelings in a way they probably never have.
    • The pandemonium that erupted around the university track in the aftermath of Bannister's run may have also contributed to undermine the rules.
    • Let me tell you about the non-stop insanity, the constant chaos, the perpetual pandemonium.
    • In the strange pandemonium that has always bedevilled Sudanese politics, even weirder things have happened.
    • It has become a macabre ritual here: the bombs go off, pandemonium, followed by investigation.
    • And from there it was pandemonium, it was hard to see what happened.
    • It was complete pandemonium in the Peterson household the week before the wedding.
    • On the collective level, poison gas created confusion and pandemonium.
    • The chaos beset domestic flights and hotel bookings as well, with resorts in the Red Sea and Aswan expecting pandemonium.
    • Uproar and pandemonium followed, matched only by that of the previous week when Mr. Loy won twice.
    • We were all jumping up and down already, so once he got there, it was complete pandemonium.
    • There was pandemonium in the bar when the television was put off during the Armagh match but after some negotiation was quickly put back on again.
    • They're just there to add to the general sense of pandemonium.
    • There was pandemonium at the docks as people tried to get out by boat, but the North Vietnamese were just across the river.
    • How appalling for people living and running businesses beside this noise, mess and pandemonium.
    • Through all the noise, commotion and apparent pandemonium, there was heavy and effective policing.
    • Clamor and outrage broke out and pandemonium reeked more havoc than anything else could.
    Synonyms
    turmoil, disorder, confusion, chaos, commotion, disturbance, tumult, turbulence, mayhem, havoc, bedlam, all hell broken loose
    bedlam, chaos, mayhem, uproar, madness, havoc, turmoil, tumult, commotion, confusion, disorder, anarchy, furore, frenzy, clamour, din, hubbub, hue and cry, babel, rumpus, fracas, hurly-burly, maelstrom

Origin

Mid 17th century: modern Latin (denoting the place of all demons, in Milton's Paradise Lost), from pan- 'all' + Greek daimōn 'demon'.

  • John Milton's epic poem Paradise Lost, first printed in 1667, tells the story of the Fall of Man. In Book I the angels who rebelled against God build Satan's new palace and capital, Pandemonium. Milton coined the name, meaning ‘the place of all the demons’, from Greek pan ‘all’ and daimōn ‘demon’. From the mid 18th century the word came to refer to other places that were centres of wickedness and then to noisy, disorderly places. In the early 19th century it developed its usual modern sense of ‘noisy disorder, bedlam, chaos’.

Rhymes

ammonium, euphonium, harmonium, pelargonium, plutonium, polonium, zirconium

Definition of pandemonium in US English:

pandemonium

nounˌpændəˈmoʊniəmˌpandəˈmōnēəm
  • Wild and noisy disorder or confusion; uproar.

    喧嚣;大混乱

    pandemonium broke out
    Example sentencesExamples
    • It has become a macabre ritual here: the bombs go off, pandemonium, followed by investigation.
    • In the strange pandemonium that has always bedevilled Sudanese politics, even weirder things have happened.
    • There was pandemonium at the docks as people tried to get out by boat, but the North Vietnamese were just across the river.
    • Through all the noise, commotion and apparent pandemonium, there was heavy and effective policing.
    • Clamor and outrage broke out and pandemonium reeked more havoc than anything else could.
    • It has been pandemonium in Korea this past week, with normally-reserved people giving vent to joyful feelings in a way they probably never have.
    • There was pandemonium in the bar when the television was put off during the Armagh match but after some negotiation was quickly put back on again.
    • The pandemonium that erupted around the university track in the aftermath of Bannister's run may have also contributed to undermine the rules.
    • They're just there to add to the general sense of pandemonium.
    • Uproar and pandemonium followed, matched only by that of the previous week when Mr. Loy won twice.
    • Let me tell you about the non-stop insanity, the constant chaos, the perpetual pandemonium.
    • It was complete pandemonium in the Peterson household the week before the wedding.
    • The chaos beset domestic flights and hotel bookings as well, with resorts in the Red Sea and Aswan expecting pandemonium.
    • On the collective level, poison gas created confusion and pandemonium.
    • There was a lot of screaming, panic and pandemonium.
    • How appalling for people living and running businesses beside this noise, mess and pandemonium.
    • There would be political pandemonium if it were actually proposed, however.
    • And from there it was pandemonium, it was hard to see what happened.
    • We were all jumping up and down already, so once he got there, it was complete pandemonium.
    • I knew that a lack of heir undoubtedly lead to pandemonium and anarchy.
    Synonyms
    turmoil, disorder, confusion, chaos, commotion, disturbance, tumult, turbulence, mayhem, havoc, bedlam, all hell broken loose
    bedlam, chaos, mayhem, uproar, madness, havoc, turmoil, tumult, commotion, confusion, disorder, anarchy, furore, frenzy, clamour, din, hubbub, hue and cry, babel, rumpus, fracas, hurly-burly, maelstrom

Origin

Mid 17th century: modern Latin (denoting the place of all demons, in Milton's Paradise Lost), from pan- ‘all’ + Greek daimōn ‘demon’.

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