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词汇 tempestuous
释义

Definition of tempestuous in English:

tempestuous

adjective tɛmˈpɛstjʊəstɛmˈpɛstʃ(u)əs
  • 1Characterized by strong and turbulent or conflicting emotion.

    剧烈的;骚动的;狂暴的

    he had a reckless and tempestuous streak

    他生性鲁莽暴躁。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Gone was the mercurial, tempestuous socialite who didn't know what she wanted, swung from mood to mood, loved childish games, or danced the night away.
    • At the basic level Scarlett is a tempestuous heroine out of a bodice-ripping historical novel, a focus for fantasy projection on the part of far more sedate women.
    • The General often seems to use reason and intelligence to paper over an emotionally tempestuous nature, and I wonder if his reaction to being ruled out of the running to lead Europe might have had something to do with this statement's odd-ness.
    • He brought strong intensity and passion to Bellini's tempestuous masterpiece.
    • Basketball's tempestuous superstar had been ordered to stay at the house since prosecutors said last week they would charge him and his uncle with assault, terroristic threats and related offences.
    • He had a tempestuous life in turbulent times.
    • I think I have a much more tempestuous and eventful amorous life than the average middle-class citizen, but I wouldn't agree that I necessarily behaved dishonourably.
    • Your relationships have been tempestuous, right?
    • It is still hard to fathom how it is that people can be so tempestuous, so very emotionally self-indulgent, around those who really shouldn't be expected to put up with it.
    • Only at that climactic moment - after extended tempestuous debate, jockeying, and tactical manoeuvres - was the Speaker's political preference made clear.
    • The potentially damaging book comes after an apparent thawing of relations between the prime minister and his chancellor, with well placed insiders saying the often tempestuous relationship is on its most even keel in years.
    • She'd be childlike, tempestuous and unpredictable.
    • It's said that he is ‘difficult’, ‘broody’, ‘paranoid’ and afflicted by a tempestuous and confrontational character.
    • As a Third World postcolonial feminist scholar and activist, I look back to my tempestuous teenage years in India, when my heroes were great revolutionaries.
    • Scorpios are supposedly the most passionate, stormy and sensitive sign of the zodiac and choosing gifts for these types can be tricky - on the one hand you have an easily hurt lovebunny, on the other, a tempestuous individual.
    • A fiery, tempestuous reading of the Allegro non troppo had just the right contrasting hues of aristocratic grace.
    • Parents under pressure may be less tolerant of tempestuous adolescent behavior, he believes, causing additional conflict.
    • He is assertive, abrasive and aggressive, a tempestuous man of passion.
    • She doesn't know Corinne, has no experience of the depth and complexity and interlinked contradictions that make up this intense, tempestuous, extraordinary woman.
    • It's basically about a relationship, a passionate tempestuous relationship.
    Synonyms
    emotional, passionate, intense, impassioned, fiery, temperamental
    volatile, excitable, mercurial, capricious, unpredictable, erratic, hot-tempered, quick-tempered
  • 2Very stormy.

    大风暴的;暴风雨的;暴风雪的

    a tempestuous wind

    狂风。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Azure blue and tranquil one moment when kissed by the sun and flattened by breeze; tempestuous and grey the next, whipped by fierce wind and powerful current.
    • We see single plants on a beach, cliffs beside water pressing in on the painter, the waves still or tempestuous, reflecting the wild vagaries of his mind.
    • The offshore waters are typically tempestuous, but winds in the channel's eastern bight will be only 10 to 15 knots.
    • It will be a difficult task as the ship has become overloaded, capricious and the ocean is tempestuous.
    • It's common knowledge that the tempestuous winter months put our vehicles through greater stress and strain, and can often make minor imperfections into major malfunctions.
    • What induced this stormy outburst on this tempestuous May morning?
    • And if tempestuous catabatic winds blow, the itinerary allows plenty of time to wait them out in four-season tents.
    • She frequently braves tempestuous weather in the little eight-seater Britton Norman, specially designed to cope with the wilds of the North Sea, and similar to the planes they use in the Antarctic.
    • Unforgiving dry, and tempestuous rainy seasons ensure that mankind's foothold here will forever be tenuous.
    • His peaceful white face was turned full towards the sky — a livid shadow falling upon it from the tempestuous clouds.
    • His eyes were stormy green, like a tempestuous patch of sky right before the tornado siren goes off, with a layer of translucent blue like the heavens beneath fluffy clouds.
    • They were tossed upon a tempestuous sea.
    • But not long after there arose against it a tempestuous wind, called Euroclydon.
    Synonyms
    stormy, blustery, squally, wild, turbulent, windy, gusty, blowy, rainy, thundery, rough, choppy
    angry, dirty, foul, nasty, inclement
    howling, roaring, raging, furious
    rare boisterous

Derivatives

  • tempestuously

  • adverbtɛmˈpɛstjʊəslitɛmˈpɛstʃ(u)əsli
    • Avery glared at him tempestuously, but began to close her books.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The start to this tempestuously competitive Test couldn't have been much worse for the home team.
      • His thoughts flew tempestuously between love and fear as she gripped his hand in hers, almost possessively.
      • He glowered, his brown eyes sparkling tempestuously.
      • There are times in British working class history where that spontaneous activity flowered so tempestuously that many workers became convinced that their activity on its own was enough to change the social order.
  • tempestuousness

  • nountɛmˈpɛstjʊəsnəstɛmˈpɛstʃ(u)əsnəs
    • The wind blew it from east to west with fickle tempestuousness, and a violent spray of it hit Pieta's cheek.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • His name is an international signature for tempestuousness, sex appeal and poetry - he has it all.
      • A sense of responsibility has shackled his tempestuousness, while a return to education has revealed qualities of introspection.
      • The middle section definitely needed a bit of tempered tempestuousness, and the absence of expressive qualities in the final section were factors detrimental to the overall success of the works.
      • For openers, Beethoven's overture to Coriolanus was just perfect, its very tempestuousness reflecting the Great One's own character.

Origin

Late Middle English: from late Latin tempestuosus, from Latin tempestas (see tempest).

Definition of tempestuous in US English:

tempestuous

adjectivetɛmˈpɛstʃ(u)əstemˈpesCH(o͞o)əs
  • 1Characterized by strong and turbulent or conflicting emotion.

    剧烈的;骚动的;狂暴的

    he had a reckless and tempestuous streak

    他生性鲁莽暴躁。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Only at that climactic moment - after extended tempestuous debate, jockeying, and tactical manoeuvres - was the Speaker's political preference made clear.
    • She doesn't know Corinne, has no experience of the depth and complexity and interlinked contradictions that make up this intense, tempestuous, extraordinary woman.
    • It's basically about a relationship, a passionate tempestuous relationship.
    • He is assertive, abrasive and aggressive, a tempestuous man of passion.
    • I think I have a much more tempestuous and eventful amorous life than the average middle-class citizen, but I wouldn't agree that I necessarily behaved dishonourably.
    • Basketball's tempestuous superstar had been ordered to stay at the house since prosecutors said last week they would charge him and his uncle with assault, terroristic threats and related offences.
    • Gone was the mercurial, tempestuous socialite who didn't know what she wanted, swung from mood to mood, loved childish games, or danced the night away.
    • It is still hard to fathom how it is that people can be so tempestuous, so very emotionally self-indulgent, around those who really shouldn't be expected to put up with it.
    • Parents under pressure may be less tolerant of tempestuous adolescent behavior, he believes, causing additional conflict.
    • The General often seems to use reason and intelligence to paper over an emotionally tempestuous nature, and I wonder if his reaction to being ruled out of the running to lead Europe might have had something to do with this statement's odd-ness.
    • Your relationships have been tempestuous, right?
    • She'd be childlike, tempestuous and unpredictable.
    • At the basic level Scarlett is a tempestuous heroine out of a bodice-ripping historical novel, a focus for fantasy projection on the part of far more sedate women.
    • Scorpios are supposedly the most passionate, stormy and sensitive sign of the zodiac and choosing gifts for these types can be tricky - on the one hand you have an easily hurt lovebunny, on the other, a tempestuous individual.
    • The potentially damaging book comes after an apparent thawing of relations between the prime minister and his chancellor, with well placed insiders saying the often tempestuous relationship is on its most even keel in years.
    • It's said that he is ‘difficult’, ‘broody’, ‘paranoid’ and afflicted by a tempestuous and confrontational character.
    • A fiery, tempestuous reading of the Allegro non troppo had just the right contrasting hues of aristocratic grace.
    • He had a tempestuous life in turbulent times.
    • He brought strong intensity and passion to Bellini's tempestuous masterpiece.
    • As a Third World postcolonial feminist scholar and activist, I look back to my tempestuous teenage years in India, when my heroes were great revolutionaries.
    Synonyms
    turbulent, stormy, tumultuous, violent, wild, lively, heated, explosive, uncontrolled, unrestrained, feverish, hysterical, frenetic, frenzied, frantic
    emotional, passionate, intense, impassioned, fiery, temperamental
  • 2Very stormy.

    大风暴的;暴风雨的;暴风雪的

    a tempestuous wind

    狂风。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • It will be a difficult task as the ship has become overloaded, capricious and the ocean is tempestuous.
    • The offshore waters are typically tempestuous, but winds in the channel's eastern bight will be only 10 to 15 knots.
    • Azure blue and tranquil one moment when kissed by the sun and flattened by breeze; tempestuous and grey the next, whipped by fierce wind and powerful current.
    • It's common knowledge that the tempestuous winter months put our vehicles through greater stress and strain, and can often make minor imperfections into major malfunctions.
    • And if tempestuous catabatic winds blow, the itinerary allows plenty of time to wait them out in four-season tents.
    • They were tossed upon a tempestuous sea.
    • His eyes were stormy green, like a tempestuous patch of sky right before the tornado siren goes off, with a layer of translucent blue like the heavens beneath fluffy clouds.
    • We see single plants on a beach, cliffs beside water pressing in on the painter, the waves still or tempestuous, reflecting the wild vagaries of his mind.
    • What induced this stormy outburst on this tempestuous May morning?
    • She frequently braves tempestuous weather in the little eight-seater Britton Norman, specially designed to cope with the wilds of the North Sea, and similar to the planes they use in the Antarctic.
    • But not long after there arose against it a tempestuous wind, called Euroclydon.
    • His peaceful white face was turned full towards the sky — a livid shadow falling upon it from the tempestuous clouds.
    • Unforgiving dry, and tempestuous rainy seasons ensure that mankind's foothold here will forever be tenuous.
    Synonyms
    stormy, blustery, squally, wild, turbulent, windy, gusty, blowy, rainy, thundery, rough, choppy
    turbulent, stormy, tumultuous, violent, wild, lively, heated, explosive, uncontrolled, unrestrained, feverish, hysterical, frenetic, frenzied, frantic

Origin

Late Middle English: from late Latin tempestuosus, from Latin tempestas (see tempest).

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