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词汇 fizzle
释义

Definition of fizzle in English:

fizzle

verb ˈfɪz(ə)lˈfɪzəl
[no object]
  • 1Make a feeble hissing or spluttering sound.

    发出微弱的嘶嘶声(或爆裂声)

    the strobe lights fizzled and flickered

    那些频闪闪光灯嘶嘶暗响,闪烁不定。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The voice fizzled and crackled once more, and everything fell silent.
    • Just that quick the light fizzled and she was back in the hall.
    • She lost her race with the lights though, as the last one, far down the path from where she was, flickered twice and fizzled.
    • During Ellie's report, the radio fizzled loudly, and a desperate male voice sounded.
    • The lights up and down the street fizzled and popped, their sparks the last bit of light on a suddenly darkened street.
    • The lights fizzled, and then a loud snap reached everyone's ears and the light just above Darren's head jerked and fell downward in a wild dance.
    Synonyms
    crackle, sputter, buzz, hiss, crack
    rare sibilate, crepitate
    1. 1.1 End or fail in a weak or disappointing way.
      成为泡影,失败;夭折
      their threatened revolt fizzled out at yesterday's meeting

      他们扬言要进行的叛乱在昨天的会议上夭折了。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • Like World Series Cricket itself, the game fizzled out to a draw.
      • The 33rd edition of the award fizzled out for many reasons.
      • The fraud story began to fade about a week ago, fizzling for lack of substance.
      • But these movements all fizzled out, for two reasons.
      • The anarchist movement fizzled out, so why do they even try?
      • People associated with the tourist trade say that the tourist boom has fizzled out and occupancy rate has fallen to eight to ten per cent.
      • But Scotland's hopes of mounting a meaningful revival and posting a challenging target fizzled out when they lost four more quick wickets.
      • During the final half-hour, it fizzled out as a contest, neither side able to break the deadlock.
      • When she returned to Britain, the relationship fizzled out.
      • Only two more scores were to be had in the remaining 30 minutes, as all life fizzled out beneath a haze of rain and the glaring floodlights.
      • Eventually it fizzled out in most of Europe and the US, but the tradition has been kept alive in the Western Isles, as it has in the rural areas of the Deep South.
      • Following a meeting with threats to withhold council tax payments, the protest fizzled out in the face of an uncompromising council.
      • A golfing boom in one of Europe's richest countries has fizzled out, with half the newly-built Swiss golf clubs crying out for members.
      • However, those protests lacked co-ordination and, once their leaders were arrested, quickly fizzled out.
      • The two sides remain sharply polarised, and periodic attempts to bridge the wide gulf between them have fizzled out.
      • But, overall, it was vacuous stuff, came to nothing, and fizzled out.
      • When the game fizzled out, so did any hint of animosity.
      • That might not seem like a lofty goal, but after the plans last year fizzled out and the hoped-for inaugural festival was cancelled, it's a realistic one.
      • It soon fizzled out, though the ‘revolt’ in France did lead to some educational reforms.
      • World Cup fever in Argentina fizzled out into muted silence as England claimed victory in the latest chapter of a fierce soccer rivalry stretching back decades.
      Synonyms
      peter out, die off, blow over, ease off, cool off, let up
      tail off, taper off, trail away/off, wither away, grind to a halt
      ebb, wane, wilt
      come to nothing, fall through, come to grief
      informal flop, fold, flatline
      archaic remit
noun ˈfɪz(ə)lˈfɪzəl
  • 1A feeble hissing or spluttering sound.

    发出微弱的嘶嘶声(或爆裂声)

    Example sentencesExamples
    • There was a fizzle, and then a pop, and finally a clattering ring.
    • A fizzle sounded, and everybody turned their heads.
    • Is one of the most remarkable runs in the history of motorsports going to end with a fizzle rather than a bang?
    • For a second there was only the electric fizzle, the sounds of hospital life going on in the background.
    • So with a damp fizzle and a surprised pop, the monitor died on us.
    Synonyms
    hiss, hissing, buzz, buzzing, crackle, crackling, sputter, sputtering, crack, cracking, white noise
    British informal zizz
    literary bombination, susurration, susurrus
    rare sibilation
    1. 1.1 A failure.
      失败
      in the end the fireworks were a fizzle

      最后焰火施放失败了。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • So, to revise the theme of the day, it's a day of fizzles.
      Synonyms
      failure, fiasco, debacle, catastrophe, disaster, blunder
      British damp squib
      informal flop, washout, let-down, botch, hash, foul-up, screw-up, dead loss, dead duck, lead balloon, lemon
      British informal cock-up, pig's ear
      North American informal snafu, clinker
      vulgar slang fuck-up, balls-up

Origin

Late Middle English (in the sense 'break wind quietly'): probably imitative (compare with fizz), but perhaps related to Middle English fist (see feisty). Current senses date from the 19th century.

  • feisty from late 19th century:

    A small farting dog is the surprising idea behind the word feisty, meaning ‘spirited and exuberant’. It comes from the earlier and now obsolete word feist or fist meaning ‘small dog’, from fisting cur or fisting hound. This was a derogatory term for a lapdog, deriving from the old verb fist, meaning ‘to break wind’. Fist may also be the source of fizzle, which in the 16th century meant ‘to break wind quietly’. Fart itself goes back to Old English times and was formerly a more respectable word than it is now—Geoffrey Chaucer used it in The Canterbury Tales.

Rhymes

chisel, drizzle, frizzle, grizzle, mizzle, sizzle, swizzle, twizzle

Definition of fizzle in US English:

fizzle

verbˈfizəlˈfɪzəl
[no object]
  • 1Make a feeble hissing or spluttering sound.

    发出微弱的嘶嘶声(或爆裂声)

    the strobe lights fizzled and flickered

    那些频闪闪光灯嘶嘶暗响,闪烁不定。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Just that quick the light fizzled and she was back in the hall.
    • During Ellie's report, the radio fizzled loudly, and a desperate male voice sounded.
    • She lost her race with the lights though, as the last one, far down the path from where she was, flickered twice and fizzled.
    • The voice fizzled and crackled once more, and everything fell silent.
    • The lights up and down the street fizzled and popped, their sparks the last bit of light on a suddenly darkened street.
    • The lights fizzled, and then a loud snap reached everyone's ears and the light just above Darren's head jerked and fell downward in a wild dance.
    Synonyms
    crackle, sputter, buzz, hiss, crack
    1. 1.1 End or fail in a weak or disappointing way.
      成为泡影,失败;夭折
      their threatened revolt fizzled out at yesterday's meeting

      他们扬言要进行的叛乱在昨天的会议上夭折了。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • People associated with the tourist trade say that the tourist boom has fizzled out and occupancy rate has fallen to eight to ten per cent.
      • Eventually it fizzled out in most of Europe and the US, but the tradition has been kept alive in the Western Isles, as it has in the rural areas of the Deep South.
      • The two sides remain sharply polarised, and periodic attempts to bridge the wide gulf between them have fizzled out.
      • A golfing boom in one of Europe's richest countries has fizzled out, with half the newly-built Swiss golf clubs crying out for members.
      • But these movements all fizzled out, for two reasons.
      • The fraud story began to fade about a week ago, fizzling for lack of substance.
      • Only two more scores were to be had in the remaining 30 minutes, as all life fizzled out beneath a haze of rain and the glaring floodlights.
      • The 33rd edition of the award fizzled out for many reasons.
      • The anarchist movement fizzled out, so why do they even try?
      • Following a meeting with threats to withhold council tax payments, the protest fizzled out in the face of an uncompromising council.
      • But Scotland's hopes of mounting a meaningful revival and posting a challenging target fizzled out when they lost four more quick wickets.
      • Like World Series Cricket itself, the game fizzled out to a draw.
      • That might not seem like a lofty goal, but after the plans last year fizzled out and the hoped-for inaugural festival was cancelled, it's a realistic one.
      • It soon fizzled out, though the ‘revolt’ in France did lead to some educational reforms.
      • When the game fizzled out, so did any hint of animosity.
      • World Cup fever in Argentina fizzled out into muted silence as England claimed victory in the latest chapter of a fierce soccer rivalry stretching back decades.
      • When she returned to Britain, the relationship fizzled out.
      • However, those protests lacked co-ordination and, once their leaders were arrested, quickly fizzled out.
      • But, overall, it was vacuous stuff, came to nothing, and fizzled out.
      • During the final half-hour, it fizzled out as a contest, neither side able to break the deadlock.
      Synonyms
      peter out, die off, blow over, ease off, cool off, let up
nounˈfizəlˈfɪzəl
  • 1A feeble hissing or spluttering sound.

    发出微弱的嘶嘶声(或爆裂声)

    the electric fizzle of the waves

    那些波产生的电流嘶嘶声。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • There was a fizzle, and then a pop, and finally a clattering ring.
    • So with a damp fizzle and a surprised pop, the monitor died on us.
    • Is one of the most remarkable runs in the history of motorsports going to end with a fizzle rather than a bang?
    • For a second there was only the electric fizzle, the sounds of hospital life going on in the background.
    • A fizzle sounded, and everybody turned their heads.
    Synonyms
    hiss, hissing, buzz, buzzing, crackle, crackling, sputter, sputtering, crack, cracking, white noise
    1. 1.1 A failure.
      失败
      in the end the fireworks were a fizzle

      最后焰火施放失败了。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • So, to revise the theme of the day, it's a day of fizzles.
      Synonyms
      failure, fiasco, debacle, catastrophe, disaster, blunder

Origin

Late Middle English (in the sense ‘break wind quietly’): probably imitative (compare with fizz), but perhaps related to Middle English fist (see feisty). Current senses date from the 19th century.

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