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词汇 gobbledygook
释义

Definition of gobbledygook in English:

gobbledygook

(also gobbledegook)
noun ˈɡɒb(ə)ldɪˌɡuːkˈɡɑbəldiˌɡuk
mass nouninformal
  • Language that is meaningless or is made unintelligible by excessive use of technical terms.

    reams of financial gobbledygook
    Example sentencesExamples
    • It took me many minutes to understand that the inside cover photos are mislabeled, and that the front photos are cited as being in the back; worse, that their captions will be technical gobbledegook to most readers.
    • While these 1s and 0s may seem like gobbledygook to the average human, it is the language that CD and DVD players understand.
    • As I say, there's a lot of jargon and bureaucratic gobbledygook here.
    • The commentary became technical and aeronautical gobbledygook, but it was quite exciting.
    • Sometimes the girls tried to read them, but they were all in jargon, or gobbledygook.
    • The ceremony also includes the dreaded Golden Bull booby prizes for the year's most baffling gobbledygook.
    • ‘When you apply the supposed key, it turns out to be total nonsense and gobbledygook,’ said Coe.
    • Setting aside all the actuarial and financial gobbledegook, the basic idea was that the boomers and others would start paying not only their own taxes but also advance paying to cover the costs of their own retirement.
    • That is doublespeak, political gobbledygook.
    • Dad spoke gobbledegook, Grandma spoke gobbledegook, as did Dad's brother and his sons.
    • Nonetheless, I think it's worth examining, because Sebastian's parsing of its meaning is such pure gobbledygook.
    • But I think younger people always like to have what they think is a secret language, something that is gobbledegook to adults.
    • The language may sound like gobbledegook but according to the council ‘although the wording may not be obvious to some people, the specialists we seek will fully understand the terminology’.
    • It is one of a torrent of jargon words, phrases, clichés and bureaucratic gobbledygook that have grown to clutter our language, and which were highlighted last week by the Plain English Campaign.
    • In a bumper year for the awards, the campaign has nominated a record 11 winners for the award nobody wants - noting an alarming rise in gobbledygook and gibberish.
    • They were tired of the double-speak and gobbledygook.
    • After all, very few Americans have a second language so everyone except the Brits is talking gobbledygook, right?
    • Language is always interesting, whether we are talking about crumbling grammar, the abbreviated sub-language of e-mail and text messages on mobile phones, modern gobbledegook, or using the English language as a nationality test.
    • He waged war against the mountains of unintelligible gobbledygook that is regularly dumped on schools by government bureaucrats.
    Synonyms
    jargon, unintelligible language, obscure language
    gibberish, claptrap, nonsense, rubbish, balderdash, blather, blether, argle-bargle
    informal mumbo jumbo, drivel, rot, tripe, hogwash, baloney, bilge, bosh, bull, bunk, guff, eyewash, piffle, twaddle, poppycock, phooey, hooey, malarkey, dribble
    British informal cobblers, codswallop, cock, stuff and nonsense, double Dutch, tosh, cack
    Scottish &amp Northern English informal havers
    North American informal garbage, flapdoodle, blathers, wack, bushwa, applesauce
    informal, dated bunkum, tommyrot, cod, gammon, toffee
    vulgar slang shit, bullshit, horseshit, crap, bollocks, balls
    North American vulgar slang crapola
    Australian/New Zealand vulgar slang bulldust

Origin

1940s (originally US): probably imitating a turkey's gobble.

Definition of gobbledygook in US English:

gobbledygook

(also gobbledegook)
nounˈɡɑbəldiˌɡukˈɡäbəldēˌɡo͞ok
informal
  • Language that is meaningless or is made unintelligible by excessive use of abstruse technical terms; nonsense.

    reams of financial gobbledygook
    Example sentencesExamples
    • That is doublespeak, political gobbledygook.
    • Dad spoke gobbledegook, Grandma spoke gobbledegook, as did Dad's brother and his sons.
    • Setting aside all the actuarial and financial gobbledegook, the basic idea was that the boomers and others would start paying not only their own taxes but also advance paying to cover the costs of their own retirement.
    • As I say, there's a lot of jargon and bureaucratic gobbledygook here.
    • Sometimes the girls tried to read them, but they were all in jargon, or gobbledygook.
    • While these 1s and 0s may seem like gobbledygook to the average human, it is the language that CD and DVD players understand.
    • It is one of a torrent of jargon words, phrases, clichés and bureaucratic gobbledygook that have grown to clutter our language, and which were highlighted last week by the Plain English Campaign.
    • They were tired of the double-speak and gobbledygook.
    • The ceremony also includes the dreaded Golden Bull booby prizes for the year's most baffling gobbledygook.
    • The language may sound like gobbledegook but according to the council ‘although the wording may not be obvious to some people, the specialists we seek will fully understand the terminology’.
    • ‘When you apply the supposed key, it turns out to be total nonsense and gobbledygook,’ said Coe.
    • It took me many minutes to understand that the inside cover photos are mislabeled, and that the front photos are cited as being in the back; worse, that their captions will be technical gobbledegook to most readers.
    • He waged war against the mountains of unintelligible gobbledygook that is regularly dumped on schools by government bureaucrats.
    • The commentary became technical and aeronautical gobbledygook, but it was quite exciting.
    • Language is always interesting, whether we are talking about crumbling grammar, the abbreviated sub-language of e-mail and text messages on mobile phones, modern gobbledegook, or using the English language as a nationality test.
    • In a bumper year for the awards, the campaign has nominated a record 11 winners for the award nobody wants - noting an alarming rise in gobbledygook and gibberish.
    • After all, very few Americans have a second language so everyone except the Brits is talking gobbledygook, right?
    • Nonetheless, I think it's worth examining, because Sebastian's parsing of its meaning is such pure gobbledygook.
    • But I think younger people always like to have what they think is a secret language, something that is gobbledegook to adults.
    Synonyms
    jargon, unintelligible language, obscure language

Origin

1940s (originally US): probably imitating a turkey's gobble.

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