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词汇 egregious
释义

Definition of egregious in English:

egregious

adjective ɪˈɡriːdʒəsəˈɡridʒəs
  • 1Outstandingly bad; shocking.

    极坏的;令人震惊的

    egregious abuses of copyright

    令人震惊的侵犯版权行为。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • I don't think you need a defector to tell you how foul he was and how egregious were his human rights abuses…
    • The public has a compelling right to know about egregious examples of nepotism and favoritism like this by public officials.
    • They are so unprofessional - if a newspaper or a broadcast programme made such an egregious slur they'd print a correction or broadcast an apology.
    • People have said to him since then that the loss of the title might not be such a bad thing, that such an egregious collapse might well help focus the mind and restore desire in the long run.
    • Opposition to the extremist activities of the university unions grew stronger as their abuses became more egregious.
    • Obviously, when journalists betray their code of ethics by making up stories, or egregious misconduct, they must be punished.
    • That's the kind of service recovery you'd expect from a decent company, especially after being publicly outed for egregious customer abuse.
    • No, the egregious violation was going past the sacred 51 day deadline for replacing a name on the ballot.
    • Keep in mind that I found these egregious examples of bias in a single issue of a single newspaper, randomly chosen.
    • If you do something outrageous or egregious enough, you can become rich and famous.
    • But I find it hard to deny that egregious self-importance in individuals is one of the defining characteristics of our society.
    • I've never seen such an egregious act of political opportunism or shameless trafficking in human misery.
    • That is an egregious violation of the responsibility a scholar has.
    • Why do you think the specialized business press continues to make what you consider such an egregious and howling error?
    • But there's often more egregious abuse among the tiny nonprofits that operate below the radar.
    • Music companies are more egregious in their abuse of consumers than the movie companies.
    • The desire for vengeance is very strong, simply because the abuses were so egregious.
    • The misuse of the grand jury by prosecutors is among the most egregious abuses of all.
    • It is in the cover-up that we usually see the most egregious abuse of a leader's power.
    • Journalists are running back and forth across town to find the most egregious technical errors and blatant fraud.
    Synonyms
    shocking, horrific, horrifying, horrible, terrible, awful, dreadful, ghastly, hideous, horrendous, frightful, atrocious, abominable, abhorrent, outrageous, hateful, loathsome, odious, gruesome, grisly, monstrous, nightmarish, heinous, harrowing, dire, vile, shameful, unspeakable, unforgivable, unpardonable
    shocking, appalling, horrific, horrifying, horrible, terrible, awful, dreadful, grievous, gross, ghastly, hideous, horrendous, frightful, atrocious, abominable, abhorrent, outrageous
  • 2archaic Remarkably good.

    〈古〉卓越的,极好的

    Example sentencesExamples
    • When he wanted to draw some one splendid and egregious, it was Clive he took for a model.
    • I am not so egregious a mathematician as you are.

Derivatives

  • egregiously

  • adverb ɪˈɡriːdʒəsliəˈɡridʒəsli
    • In an outstandingly bad way; shockingly.

      极坏的;令人震惊的

      we've been misleading you most egregiously
      Example sentencesExamples
      • as submodifier the cars became egregiously unreliable
      • We live in a society which has become so accustomed to accepting egregiously mindless anti-social behaviour as meaningful rebellion that it could see a hero lurking somewhere in a hooligan.
      • The average price of U.S. electricity fell throughout the twentieth century, and it has kept falling since, except in egregiously mismanaged markets such as California's.
      • There is something terribly wrong in this country when a major story like that can be printed which is so egregiously wrong.
  • egregiousness

  • noun
    • We hardly recognize the egregiousness of insults like this when they most urgently need to be remembered.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • But today the egregiousness threshold has been lowered and the ecumenical etiquette bar has been raised, so one withholds both consent and dissent.
      • The Times had its several pomposities and egregiousness.
      • The English dub is awful, of course, but since 99% of all anime is served up this way in North America, it becomes increasingly difficult to put red marks on a disc for this egregiousness.
      • That is not to lessen the egregiousness or unacceptability of such behaviors.

Origin

Mid 16th century (in sense 2): from Latin egregius 'illustrious', literally 'standing out from the flock', from ex- 'out' + grex, greg- 'flock'. Sense 1 (late 16th century) probably arose as an ironical use.

  • congregate from Late Middle English:

    The Latin word for a herd or flock was grex, giving congregare, meaning ‘to collect into a herd or flock, to unite’. Gregarious (mid 17th century), meaning ‘fond of company’, is also descended from grex, as are aggregate (Late Middle English) ‘herd together’; egregious (mid 16th century) ‘standing out from the herd’ and originally complimentary; and segregation (mid 16th century) ‘set apart from the herd’.

Definition of egregious in US English:

egregious

adjectiveəˈɡrējəsəˈɡridʒəs
  • 1Outstandingly bad; shocking.

    极坏的;令人震惊的

    egregious abuses of copyright

    令人震惊的侵犯版权行为。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • But I find it hard to deny that egregious self-importance in individuals is one of the defining characteristics of our society.
    • Opposition to the extremist activities of the university unions grew stronger as their abuses became more egregious.
    • Obviously, when journalists betray their code of ethics by making up stories, or egregious misconduct, they must be punished.
    • No, the egregious violation was going past the sacred 51 day deadline for replacing a name on the ballot.
    • People have said to him since then that the loss of the title might not be such a bad thing, that such an egregious collapse might well help focus the mind and restore desire in the long run.
    • They are so unprofessional - if a newspaper or a broadcast programme made such an egregious slur they'd print a correction or broadcast an apology.
    • Why do you think the specialized business press continues to make what you consider such an egregious and howling error?
    • The misuse of the grand jury by prosecutors is among the most egregious abuses of all.
    • Keep in mind that I found these egregious examples of bias in a single issue of a single newspaper, randomly chosen.
    • But there's often more egregious abuse among the tiny nonprofits that operate below the radar.
    • That's the kind of service recovery you'd expect from a decent company, especially after being publicly outed for egregious customer abuse.
    • Music companies are more egregious in their abuse of consumers than the movie companies.
    • That is an egregious violation of the responsibility a scholar has.
    • If you do something outrageous or egregious enough, you can become rich and famous.
    • It is in the cover-up that we usually see the most egregious abuse of a leader's power.
    • I've never seen such an egregious act of political opportunism or shameless trafficking in human misery.
    • Journalists are running back and forth across town to find the most egregious technical errors and blatant fraud.
    • The public has a compelling right to know about egregious examples of nepotism and favoritism like this by public officials.
    • I don't think you need a defector to tell you how foul he was and how egregious were his human rights abuses…
    • The desire for vengeance is very strong, simply because the abuses were so egregious.
    Synonyms
    shocking, horrific, horrifying, horrible, terrible, awful, dreadful, ghastly, hideous, horrendous, frightful, atrocious, abominable, abhorrent, outrageous, hateful, loathsome, odious, gruesome, grisly, monstrous, nightmarish, heinous, harrowing, dire, vile, shameful, unspeakable, unforgivable, unpardonable
    shocking, appalling, horrific, horrifying, horrible, terrible, awful, dreadful, grievous, gross, ghastly, hideous, horrendous, frightful, atrocious, abominable, abhorrent, outrageous
  • 2archaic Remarkably good.

    〈古〉卓越的,极好的

    Example sentencesExamples
    • I am not so egregious a mathematician as you are.
    • When he wanted to draw some one splendid and egregious, it was Clive he took for a model.

Origin

Mid 16th century (in egregious (sense 2)): from Latin egregius ‘illustrious’, literally ‘standing out from the flock’, from ex- ‘out’ + grex, greg- ‘flock’. Sense 1 (late 16th century) probably arose as an ironic use.

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