释义 |
Definition of ambiguously in English: ambiguouslyadverbamˈbɪɡjʊəsliæmˈbɪɡjʊəsli 1So as to be open to more than one interpretation. the new clause is ambiguously worded Example sentencesExamples - Her record company launched a campaign to re-situate her not as an Anglo singer with an ambiguously "foreign-sounding" last name.
- Forgiveness was the punctum I found in Unforgiven and which is already there in the text, if ambiguously.
- They suggest that female characters are often ambiguously placed as retributive agents and eroticized victims of violence.
- Extracts from the novel are included, which show somewhat ambiguously the conventionalism of the writer.
- Such poems as these complicitly and ambiguously critique racism, sexism, and violence.
- The painting is a self-portrait with the figure ambiguously caught somewhere in the mid-ground of opposing bedroom mirrors
- The set of four gouaches on paper ambiguously stages tensions among the four men in a barren gray landscape.
- Every line, both verbal and musical, is ambiguously literal and self-critical.
- It is a surrealistic tale ambiguously told on the subject of alien abduction.
- To casually term her the "love" of a social inferior is playing fast and loose, or at the very least, unnecessarily ambiguously, with the evidence.
- 1.1 So as to be open to doubt or uncertainty.
a peculiar, ambiguously remembered landscape where past and present seem repeatedly confounded Example sentencesExamples - As well as pushing notions of identity in the film, he makes Sean an ambiguously gay character.
- The rather ambiguously autonomous stature of art in militaristic states still has the ability to put a guilty shiver down the spine.
- Things had been left so ambiguously, and I didn't want there to be a hint of negativity left between us.
- The distinction between "we the people" and "those in high office" hung ambiguously in the air.
- Intervening in this particular republic is much less ambiguously a win-win situation.
- The mock (and ambiguously historical) apocalypse provides the setting for the thematics that comprise the main matter of the book.
- This is very much the lo-fi, ambiguously related peppermint duo of old.
- In addition to being ambiguously sincere, it happens to be false.
- The opus did not now leave the strangely, ambiguously ambivalent feeling it had an hour earlier.
- Later in the film, her intense and ambiguously romantic friendship with the fisherman challenges her marriage.
Definition of ambiguously in US English: ambiguouslyadverbamˈbiɡyo͝oəslēæmˈbɪɡjʊəsli 1So as to be open to more than one interpretation. the new clause is ambiguously worded Example sentencesExamples - They suggest that female characters are often ambiguously placed as retributive agents and eroticized victims of violence.
- Extracts from the novel are included, which show somewhat ambiguously the conventionalism of the writer.
- The painting is a self-portrait with the figure ambiguously caught somewhere in the mid-ground of opposing bedroom mirrors
- The set of four gouaches on paper ambiguously stages tensions among the four men in a barren gray landscape.
- Every line, both verbal and musical, is ambiguously literal and self-critical.
- Forgiveness was the punctum I found in Unforgiven and which is already there in the text, if ambiguously.
- Her record company launched a campaign to re-situate her not as an Anglo singer with an ambiguously "foreign-sounding" last name.
- To casually term her the "love" of a social inferior is playing fast and loose, or at the very least, unnecessarily ambiguously, with the evidence.
- Such poems as these complicitly and ambiguously critique racism, sexism, and violence.
- It is a surrealistic tale ambiguously told on the subject of alien abduction.
- 1.1 So as to be open to doubt or uncertainty.
a peculiar, ambiguously remembered landscape where past and present seem repeatedly confounded Example sentencesExamples - Intervening in this particular republic is much less ambiguously a win-win situation.
- The mock (and ambiguously historical) apocalypse provides the setting for the thematics that comprise the main matter of the book.
- Later in the film, her intense and ambiguously romantic friendship with the fisherman challenges her marriage.
- In addition to being ambiguously sincere, it happens to be false.
- Things had been left so ambiguously, and I didn't want there to be a hint of negativity left between us.
- The opus did not now leave the strangely, ambiguously ambivalent feeling it had an hour earlier.
- As well as pushing notions of identity in the film, he makes Sean an ambiguously gay character.
- The distinction between "we the people" and "those in high office" hung ambiguously in the air.
- This is very much the lo-fi, ambiguously related peppermint duo of old.
- The rather ambiguously autonomous stature of art in militaristic states still has the ability to put a guilty shiver down the spine.
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