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词汇 maladroit
释义

Definition of maladroit in English:

maladroit

adjective ˌmaləˈdrɔɪtˌmæləˈdrɔɪt
  • Inefficient or inept; clumsy.

    无效率的;无能的;无效果的;笨拙的

    both men are unhappy about the maladroit way the matter has been handled
    Example sentencesExamples
    • This has been an extremely clumsy maladroit approach on the part of the US economic team.
    • Who loves quiet conversations about feelings or ideas, and can give a dynamite presentation to a big audience, but seems awkward in groups and maladroit at small talk?
    • Perhaps I'm too cynical, but only commercial reasons spring to my mind when I try to justify this maladroit wraparound device.
    • If Lott's original words are not enough to disqualify him as Senate leader, then his maladroit grasp of public relations should be.
    • So, these vines are actually moving these people, explaining their maladroit walking patterns.
    • Allen, of course, hotly denies this, arguing that his lusty, maladroit, cowardly, witty and nebbish persona is a comic archetype.
    • But what is impressive is the way that their dialogue, often callow and maladroit, is callow and maladroit in precisely the right way.
    • Measured against other degenerate cultures, we are still, in some respects, at the stage of a touchingly maladroit infancy.
    • The results included muddled avant-garde theatrical staging techniques and insensitive and maladroit portraits of African Americans.
    • Padlin stared helplessly at his drawing, at his maladroit strokes.
    • A single maladroit quip or an unscripted dramatic moment on the campaign trail could spell the difference between victory and defeat.
    • Clinton's maladroit staffing decisions contributed to the political turmoil of his initial years in the White House.
    • In the 1930s and in the 1960s, all sorts of maladroit, stodgy unions did quite well.
    • In one measured, maladroit motion - only after he had lined up the shot with the ball resting in his right palm - O'Neal aimed and fired.
    • This he contrasts to the maladroit policies pursued by the natives after they acquired independence - which included high tariffs, industrial planning, labor protection, and the like.
    • The Germans also launched a maladroit effort to entice Mexico into the war, exposed by the Zimmermann telegraph affair.
    • But her long harsh sentence is cockeyed, as is Peter Beattie's very disappointing and uncharacteristically maladroit response.
    • And so much unlike his younger brother, Eric was maladroit at handling simple home economics tasks.
    • A shame, then; in the book reviewed here… a picture gradually emerges of the artist as a cantankerous and socially maladroit buffoon.
    • I will only make one observation - the Chinese government has been extraordinarily maladroit over the past six months.
    Synonyms
    bungling, awkward, inept, clumsy, bumbling, incompetent, unskilful, heavy-handed, ungainly, inelegant, inexpert, graceless, ungraceful, gauche, unhandy, uncoordinated, gawky, cloddish, clodhopping, all fingers and thumbs, flat-footed, lumbering
    like a bull in a china shop, tactless, insensitive, thoughtless, inconsiderate, undiplomatic, impolitic, injudicious
    informal butterfingered, ham-fisted, ham-handed, cack-handed
    archaic lubberly

Derivatives

  • maladroitly

  • adverb ˌmaləˈdrɔɪtliˌmæləˈdrɔɪtli
    • Legalist institutions that manage that pursuit maladroitly are ultimately swept away.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Small-scale land restitution to those who could prove they owned it before 1947 has been maladroitly handled.
      • I groaned internally as I recalled the plane ride where I had maladroitly gotten sick all over Ross.
      • Aida walked maladroitly to a couch and sat down, slipping his sandals off his feet.
      • We should not be guided by how to get the United States out of the quagmire it has so maladroitly manufactured.
  • maladroitness

  • noun ˌmaləˈdrɔɪtnəsˌmæləˈdrɔɪtnəs
    • Unfortunately it appears that Mr Rahman's maladroitness precedes him.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • By implication, an antidote to the maladroitness, the maladaption, the clumsiness of the shy is simply learning to dance.
      • Mishaps and maladroitness end in pairing for all, as their love ‘started in eternity and will last till doomsday’.
      • Nerd social maladroitness, rather than arrogance, is the key to understanding this bachelor's behavior.
      • Not only is the moment not particularly funny, its maladroitness ruins any momentum the film had been building.

Origin

Late 17th century: French.

Rhymes

adroit, dacoit, Detroit, doit, droit, exploit, quoit

Definition of maladroit in US English:

maladroit

adjectiveˌmæləˈdrɔɪtˌmaləˈdroit
  • Ineffective or bungling; clumsy.

    无效率的;无能的;无效果的;笨拙的

    both men are unhappy about the maladroit way the matter has been handled
    Example sentencesExamples
    • I will only make one observation - the Chinese government has been extraordinarily maladroit over the past six months.
    • But what is impressive is the way that their dialogue, often callow and maladroit, is callow and maladroit in precisely the right way.
    • In one measured, maladroit motion - only after he had lined up the shot with the ball resting in his right palm - O'Neal aimed and fired.
    • This has been an extremely clumsy maladroit approach on the part of the US economic team.
    • So, these vines are actually moving these people, explaining their maladroit walking patterns.
    • In the 1930s and in the 1960s, all sorts of maladroit, stodgy unions did quite well.
    • This he contrasts to the maladroit policies pursued by the natives after they acquired independence - which included high tariffs, industrial planning, labor protection, and the like.
    • Allen, of course, hotly denies this, arguing that his lusty, maladroit, cowardly, witty and nebbish persona is a comic archetype.
    • A single maladroit quip or an unscripted dramatic moment on the campaign trail could spell the difference between victory and defeat.
    • Measured against other degenerate cultures, we are still, in some respects, at the stage of a touchingly maladroit infancy.
    • The Germans also launched a maladroit effort to entice Mexico into the war, exposed by the Zimmermann telegraph affair.
    • Perhaps I'm too cynical, but only commercial reasons spring to my mind when I try to justify this maladroit wraparound device.
    • The results included muddled avant-garde theatrical staging techniques and insensitive and maladroit portraits of African Americans.
    • If Lott's original words are not enough to disqualify him as Senate leader, then his maladroit grasp of public relations should be.
    • Clinton's maladroit staffing decisions contributed to the political turmoil of his initial years in the White House.
    • A shame, then; in the book reviewed here… a picture gradually emerges of the artist as a cantankerous and socially maladroit buffoon.
    • But her long harsh sentence is cockeyed, as is Peter Beattie's very disappointing and uncharacteristically maladroit response.
    • Padlin stared helplessly at his drawing, at his maladroit strokes.
    • Who loves quiet conversations about feelings or ideas, and can give a dynamite presentation to a big audience, but seems awkward in groups and maladroit at small talk?
    • And so much unlike his younger brother, Eric was maladroit at handling simple home economics tasks.
    Synonyms
    bungling, awkward, inept, clumsy, bumbling, incompetent, unskilful, heavy-handed, ungainly, inelegant, inexpert, graceless, ungraceful, gauche, unhandy, uncoordinated, gawky, cloddish, clodhopping, all fingers and thumbs, flat-footed, lumbering

Origin

Late 17th century: French.

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