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词汇 untalented
释义

Definition of untalented in English:

untalented

adjectiveʌnˈtaləntɪdˌənˈtæləntəd
  • (of a person) not having a natural aptitude or skill.

    没有天赋的,缺乏才能的

    local histories written by untalented amateurs
    Kate felt hopelessly unbrilliant and untalented
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Dreams are the last refuge of the untalented writer.
    • This pretentious, precious, pseudo-poetic, name-dropping drivel is one of those endless monologues that in the hands of an arrogant, untalented twit become menaces to society.
    • It's not that he's untalented - in fact, his DJ-ing skills are clearly top-notch as he deftly weaves his jazzy samples into a cohesive whole.
    • Too often the SAC has drip-fed amateurish and incompetent publishers, sustained untalented writers who would rather run a workshop than confront a blank screen and baled out magazines which are barely literate.
    • As he warns, you don't want to hire untalented women who'll just write about ‘women's issues.’
    • I cannot recall a movie that has starred so many untalented people who cannot act.
    • The only cursed people I know are the untalented actors and actresses that somehow manage to get cast, based on good auditions and producers who forget how bad they were in their last work.
    • There were the appallingly untalented, removed from that friendly mirror in their bedroom, dancing like stick insects with St Vitus dance and impaling themselves on hideous voices.
    • Are you honestly telling me that Botticelli was untalented?
    • Historically, the talented ones have been the ones to survive and pass along their genetic material - the untalented or unfit have died off without reproducing, thus advancing our species.
    • There are too many earnest, young, untalented performers (mostly from English and American Universities) who mount abbreviated versions of classic plays and who have minimal directing and acting abilities.
    • Realistically, the national team that has ended Zambia's treasured record of seven straight appearances at the Africa Cup finals would have found themselves not only ill-equipped for the Tunisia job but also untalented.
    • During the 1820s, a pompous and untalented versifier referred to the Pacific as a ‘liquid waste’, which makes it sound like sewage.
    • He was the classic dour, authoritarian socialist, a masterly desk and committee politician but disdainful of and untalented at electoral politics.
    • Throw all the money in the world at an untalented writer and they will stay untalented and you can bet a promising one will be standing right behind them, on the verge of giving up.
    • This success will help these students be more comfortable in drawing later and not think that they are untalented in art.
    • Actors are usually, on the whole, thick, desperate, untalented and always thinking, ‘What about me?
    • The imposing residence of the director has been turned over to the Sydney Writers' Centre where the untalented are pursued by the incompetent.
    • Sometimes when you go through the papers, you have to read that you're a boring, untalented person, and you have to live with that.
    • By 1914 former reformists were beginning to regard violence as the only means left to loosen a regime which seemed more and more intolerant, intolerable, and, worse, untalented.

Definition of untalented in US English:

untalented

adjectiveˌənˈtaləntədˌənˈtæləntəd
  • (of a person) not having a natural aptitude or skill.

    没有天赋的,缺乏才能的

    Example sentencesExamples
    • This pretentious, precious, pseudo-poetic, name-dropping drivel is one of those endless monologues that in the hands of an arrogant, untalented twit become menaces to society.
    • Realistically, the national team that has ended Zambia's treasured record of seven straight appearances at the Africa Cup finals would have found themselves not only ill-equipped for the Tunisia job but also untalented.
    • Sometimes when you go through the papers, you have to read that you're a boring, untalented person, and you have to live with that.
    • I cannot recall a movie that has starred so many untalented people who cannot act.
    • There were the appallingly untalented, removed from that friendly mirror in their bedroom, dancing like stick insects with St Vitus dance and impaling themselves on hideous voices.
    • As he warns, you don't want to hire untalented women who'll just write about ‘women's issues.’
    • It's not that he's untalented - in fact, his DJ-ing skills are clearly top-notch as he deftly weaves his jazzy samples into a cohesive whole.
    • Historically, the talented ones have been the ones to survive and pass along their genetic material - the untalented or unfit have died off without reproducing, thus advancing our species.
    • The imposing residence of the director has been turned over to the Sydney Writers' Centre where the untalented are pursued by the incompetent.
    • Too often the SAC has drip-fed amateurish and incompetent publishers, sustained untalented writers who would rather run a workshop than confront a blank screen and baled out magazines which are barely literate.
    • During the 1820s, a pompous and untalented versifier referred to the Pacific as a ‘liquid waste’, which makes it sound like sewage.
    • This success will help these students be more comfortable in drawing later and not think that they are untalented in art.
    • The only cursed people I know are the untalented actors and actresses that somehow manage to get cast, based on good auditions and producers who forget how bad they were in their last work.
    • Dreams are the last refuge of the untalented writer.
    • There are too many earnest, young, untalented performers (mostly from English and American Universities) who mount abbreviated versions of classic plays and who have minimal directing and acting abilities.
    • He was the classic dour, authoritarian socialist, a masterly desk and committee politician but disdainful of and untalented at electoral politics.
    • By 1914 former reformists were beginning to regard violence as the only means left to loosen a regime which seemed more and more intolerant, intolerable, and, worse, untalented.
    • Actors are usually, on the whole, thick, desperate, untalented and always thinking, ‘What about me?
    • Are you honestly telling me that Botticelli was untalented?
    • Throw all the money in the world at an untalented writer and they will stay untalented and you can bet a promising one will be standing right behind them, on the verge of giving up.
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