释义 |
Definition of vivacious in English: vivaciousadjective vɪˈveɪʃəsvʌɪˈveɪʃəs (especially of a woman) attractively lively and animated. (尤指妇女)活泼的;生气勃勃的 her vivacious and elegant mother she was dark-haired and vivacious Example sentencesExamples - She was such a bright, vivacious person, my angel, my star, my baby.
- Meanwhile, Patrick - confident and laid-back - is trying to finish with the vivacious Susan.
- Good for very young readers, this book is about a vivacious mom in a wheelchair.
- She was a very bubbly and vivacious woman who usually had no difficulty meeting people.
- Countless women have been simply delighted by this charming and vivacious woman.
- He had been married only a year, but he could no longer make love to his energetic, vivacious wife.
- He instantly whipped around to stare at the vivacious girl with her hand placed on her hip.
- She said Johnston will be remembered for her vivacious nature, spirituality and hard work.
- Fresh, vivacious and lively, this wine has enormous energy and vitality.
- She was tiny, pretty, and vivacious, her sparkle compensating for a lack of education.
- It was so amazing, meeting her in person, and she's really as bubbly and vivacious as she appears in writing.
- Foreign girls are vivacious, flirtatious, open minded and fun.
- At the school dance, a teenager kept his eye on a beautiful, vivacious girl, a little older than him and with curves in all the right places.
- When he was beginning to be more worried than angry, he finally asked a crewmember if they had seen his vivacious wife.
- I became once again vivacious and cheerful, thanks to the effect of his powerful will.
- Within the space of a day, this young, vivacious woman had managed to awaken him as no other had done.
- Anyway, she was a vivacious, ebullient sort of girl, and I took an immediate liking to her.
- Rule-breaking was one of the things I loved most about my silly and vivacious wife.
- He wanted to know how the bubbly and vivacious girl was coping mentally.
- A lively and vivacious teenager, Katie was an exemplary student loved by her teachers and fellow pupils alike.
Synonyms lively, animated, full of life, spirited, high-spirited, effervescent, bubbling, bubbly, ebullient, buoyant, sparkling, scintillating, light-hearted, carefree, happy-go-lucky, jaunty, merry, happy, jolly, joyful, full of fun, full of the joys of spring, cheery, cheerful, perky, sunny, airy, breezy, bright, enthusiastic, irrepressible, vibrant, vivid, vital, zestful, energetic, dynamic, vigorous, full of vim and vigour, lusty informal bright-eyed and bushy-tailed, bright and breezy, peppy, zingy, zippy, bouncy, upbeat, chirpy, full of beans, chipper North American informal peart dated gay
Derivativesadverbvʌɪˈveɪʃəslivɪˈveɪʃəsli His landscapes possess a palpable, lively freshness that is both delicate and vivaciously atmospheric, and his subtle, innovative use of line and colour, suffused with a buoyant luminescence, is captivating. Example sentencesExamples - ‘Good heavens,’ she chirped vivaciously, ‘what a grand night!’
- Two young girls were dancing vivaciously twirling spectacular scarves of sapphire and pink.
- Lebanese people usually sit close together and interact vivaciously.
- Piercing blue eyes glare from under thick, black lashes while naturally rosy cheeks appear vivaciously stark against elegant, pale ivory skin.
nounvʌɪˈveɪʃəsnəsvɪˈveɪʃəsnəs We wish Margaret many more years of good health and happiness and hope she maintains her great wit and vivaciousness for many more years in the future. Example sentencesExamples - Her smile was worth seeing, and her green eyes sparkled with vibrancy and vivaciousness.
- For not only is she immensely talented as a performer, she is also matchless in her energy and vivaciousness.
- Posture, in addition, is a huge indicator of the vivaciousness of the physical body.
- Oddly enough, I never quite recaptured the raw vivaciousness of my childhood homelessness, but that is probably because I am not that little girl anymore.
OriginMid 17th century: from Latin vivax, vivac- 'lively, vigorous' (from vivere 'to live') + -ious. survive from Late Middle English: Survive entered English via Old French from Latin supervivere, based on vivere ‘to live’, as in revive (Late Middle English), vivacious (mid 17th century), and vivid (mid 17th century). According to Charles Darwin's theory of evolution, those animals and plants which tend to survive and produce more offspring are the ones best adapted to their environment, while those less well adapted become extinct. The idea is summed up in the phrase the survival of the fittest, which was coined by the English philosopher and sociologist Herbert Spencer in Principles of Biology (1865). Darwin himself had originally used the term natural selection, but approved of Spencer's version. Beyond its technical use the phrase is often used loosely to suggest that the strongest or most ruthless will succeed at the expense of others, though this is a distortion of the original Darwinian notion.
RhymesAthanasius, audacious, bodacious, cactaceous, capacious, carbonaceous, contumacious, Cretaceous, curvaceous, disputatious, edacious, efficacious, fallacious, farinaceous, flirtatious, foliaceous, fugacious, gracious, hellacious, herbaceous, Ignatius, loquacious, mendacious, mordacious, ostentatious, perspicacious, pertinacious, pugnacious, rapacious, sagacious, salacious, saponaceous, sebaceous, sequacious, setaceous, spacious, tenacious, veracious, vexatious, voracious Definition of vivacious in US English: vivaciousadjective (especially of a woman) attractively lively and animated. (尤指妇女)活泼的;生气勃勃的 her vivacious and elegant mother she was dark-haired and vivacious Example sentencesExamples - When he was beginning to be more worried than angry, he finally asked a crewmember if they had seen his vivacious wife.
- Good for very young readers, this book is about a vivacious mom in a wheelchair.
- I became once again vivacious and cheerful, thanks to the effect of his powerful will.
- Within the space of a day, this young, vivacious woman had managed to awaken him as no other had done.
- Rule-breaking was one of the things I loved most about my silly and vivacious wife.
- Foreign girls are vivacious, flirtatious, open minded and fun.
- Meanwhile, Patrick - confident and laid-back - is trying to finish with the vivacious Susan.
- Anyway, she was a vivacious, ebullient sort of girl, and I took an immediate liking to her.
- He instantly whipped around to stare at the vivacious girl with her hand placed on her hip.
- Countless women have been simply delighted by this charming and vivacious woman.
- It was so amazing, meeting her in person, and she's really as bubbly and vivacious as she appears in writing.
- She said Johnston will be remembered for her vivacious nature, spirituality and hard work.
- At the school dance, a teenager kept his eye on a beautiful, vivacious girl, a little older than him and with curves in all the right places.
- She was a very bubbly and vivacious woman who usually had no difficulty meeting people.
- A lively and vivacious teenager, Katie was an exemplary student loved by her teachers and fellow pupils alike.
- He had been married only a year, but he could no longer make love to his energetic, vivacious wife.
- She was such a bright, vivacious person, my angel, my star, my baby.
- She was tiny, pretty, and vivacious, her sparkle compensating for a lack of education.
- Fresh, vivacious and lively, this wine has enormous energy and vitality.
- He wanted to know how the bubbly and vivacious girl was coping mentally.
Synonyms lively, animated, full of life, spirited, high-spirited, effervescent, bubbling, bubbly, ebullient, buoyant, sparkling, scintillating, light-hearted, carefree, happy-go-lucky, jaunty, merry, happy, jolly, joyful, full of fun, full of the joys of spring, cheery, cheerful, perky, sunny, airy, breezy, bright, enthusiastic, irrepressible, vibrant, vivid, vital, zestful, energetic, dynamic, vigorous, full of vim and vigour, lusty
OriginMid 17th century: from Latin vivax, vivac- ‘lively, vigorous’ (from vivere ‘to live’) + -ious. |