释义 |
Definition of trivial in English: trivialadjective ˈtrɪvɪəlˈtrɪviəl 1Of little value or importance. 琐碎的,无价值的,不重要的 huge fines were imposed for trivial offences 对无足轻重的过错施以重罚。 琐碎的细节。 Example sentencesExamples - There are several lessons to be learned from this incident, some trivial, some quite important.
- Many people will benefit from this yet still there are some who obstruct and complain about the smallest trivial detail.
- Very often qualitative studies seem to be full of apparently trivial details.
- Newspapers always mix the trivial with the important, for the very good reason that trivia can be entertaining.
- He recalls a day when they argued over a trivial script detail.
- But, of course, the fact is that offences range from the trivial to the serious.
- And the pressure to conform to all these trivial values is absolutely enormous.
- The answers might be of trivial importance now, but someday it could be lifesaving.
- Even if the case is of very little importance, involving trivial loss, seeking truth from facts shall always be the norm for action.
- He handed out yellow cards for trivial offences, but ignored several dangerous tackles.
- This lack of context is unfortunate, given the amount of space devoted to a plethora of more peripheral or trivial details.
- No detail is too trivial to elude the boastful commentary.
- It does not matter that the offences are trivial or made under the immunity perhaps conferred by the Senate in the course of an inquiry.
- But it is sad that the media has been highlighting trivial events while ignoring important health issues.
- That suggests the possibility of anything but a trivial role for land value taxation in many of the rich countries.
- She had a light touch and a way of painting a portrait through a million trivial details that seems very contemporary.
- Sorting out the important from the trivial adds to good management of matters.
- To our contemporary minds, that might seem a relatively trivial offense.
- Possibly they see the offence as too trivial to pursue.
- A plethora of issues, both important as well as trivial, have had an effect on the public opinion.
Synonyms unimportant, insignificant, inconsequential, minor, of no/little account, of no/little consequence, of no/little importance, not worth bothering about, not worth mentioning incidental, inessential, non-essential, petty, trifling, fiddling, pettifogging, footling, small, slight, little, inconsiderable, negligible, paltry, nugatory meaningless, pointless, worthless, idle flimsy, insubstantial informal piddling, piffling, penny-ante British informal twopenny-halfpenny North American informal nickel-and-dime, small-bore North American vulgar slang chickenshit - 1.1 (of a person) concerned only with petty things.
(人)务小的,浅薄的 Example sentencesExamples - A few hecklers managed to get in during this period but they were quite trivial.
- Mary is an amiable, conventional, and trivial young woman who gets married.
- Sometimes he presents her as a vain and trivial woman, sometimes as merely ignorant and fearful.
Synonyms frivolous, superficial, shallow, unthinking, empty-headed, feather-brained, lightweight, foolish, silly
2Mathematics Denoting a subgroup that either contains only the identity element or is identical with the given group. 〔数〕平凡的 Example sentencesExamples - The first topology is a trivial one, just stating the genes are allelically identical.
- In group theory one of the topics he studied was that of groups with only trivial automorphisms.
- Next in complexity to the trivial ones are the mazes represented by trees.
OriginLate Middle English (in the sense 'belonging to the trivium'): from medieval Latin trivialis, from Latin trivium (see trivium). Latin trivium meant ‘a place where three roads meet’, and it is from this that we get our word trivial. Medieval universities offered a basic introductory course involving the study of three subjects—grammar, rhetoric, and logic—known as the trivium. The earliest uses of trivial relate to this basic, low-level course, with the main modern meanings, ‘commonplace, ordinary’ and ‘unimportant, slight’, developing in the late 16th century. The plural of Latin trivium has also entered English as trivia. A crossroads, a place where not three but four roads meet, has a similar metaphorical relationship with crucial, a word which means almost the exact opposite of trivial.
Definition of trivial in US English: trivialadjectiveˈtrivēəlˈtrɪviəl 1Of little value or importance. 琐碎的,无价值的,不重要的 huge fines were imposed for trivial offenses 对无足轻重的过错施以重罚。 琐碎的细节。 Example sentencesExamples - Very often qualitative studies seem to be full of apparently trivial details.
- To our contemporary minds, that might seem a relatively trivial offense.
- And the pressure to conform to all these trivial values is absolutely enormous.
- It does not matter that the offences are trivial or made under the immunity perhaps conferred by the Senate in the course of an inquiry.
- That suggests the possibility of anything but a trivial role for land value taxation in many of the rich countries.
- The answers might be of trivial importance now, but someday it could be lifesaving.
- Newspapers always mix the trivial with the important, for the very good reason that trivia can be entertaining.
- He recalls a day when they argued over a trivial script detail.
- No detail is too trivial to elude the boastful commentary.
- But, of course, the fact is that offences range from the trivial to the serious.
- Many people will benefit from this yet still there are some who obstruct and complain about the smallest trivial detail.
- A plethora of issues, both important as well as trivial, have had an effect on the public opinion.
- He handed out yellow cards for trivial offences, but ignored several dangerous tackles.
- This lack of context is unfortunate, given the amount of space devoted to a plethora of more peripheral or trivial details.
- Even if the case is of very little importance, involving trivial loss, seeking truth from facts shall always be the norm for action.
- Possibly they see the offence as too trivial to pursue.
- She had a light touch and a way of painting a portrait through a million trivial details that seems very contemporary.
- But it is sad that the media has been highlighting trivial events while ignoring important health issues.
- Sorting out the important from the trivial adds to good management of matters.
- There are several lessons to be learned from this incident, some trivial, some quite important.
Synonyms unimportant, insignificant, inconsequential, minor, of little account, of no account, of little consequence, of no consequence, of little importance, of no importance, not worth bothering about, not worth mentioning - 1.1 (of a person) concerned only with trifling or unimportant things.
(人)务小的,浅薄的 Example sentencesExamples - Mary is an amiable, conventional, and trivial young woman who gets married.
- Sometimes he presents her as a vain and trivial woman, sometimes as merely ignorant and fearful.
- A few hecklers managed to get in during this period but they were quite trivial.
Synonyms frivolous, superficial, shallow, unthinking, empty-headed, feather-brained, lightweight, foolish, silly - 1.2Mathematics Denoting a subgroup that either contains only the identity element or is identical with the given group.
〔数〕平凡的 Example sentencesExamples - The first topology is a trivial one, just stating the genes are allelically identical.
- Next in complexity to the trivial ones are the mazes represented by trees.
- In group theory one of the topics he studied was that of groups with only trivial automorphisms.
OriginLate Middle English (in the sense ‘belonging to the trivium’): from medieval Latin trivialis, from Latin trivium (see trivium). |