释义 |
Definition of blasé in English: blaséadjective ˈblɑːzeɪblɑˈzeɪ Unimpressed with or indifferent to something because one has experienced or seen it so often before. (因司空见惯而)无动于衷的,漠不关心的 she was becoming quite blasé about the dangers 她变得对危险全然无动于衷。 Example sentencesExamples - Clearly, adopting a blasé attitude toward house prices has taken many years to achieve.
- Am I a snob because the show leaves me unresponsive and blasé?
- Remember how, by the fifth snow shower, you'd become completely blasé about those falling flakes as if they were the most normal thing in the world?
- All three men are blasé about the prospects of being burglarized.
- As she speaks, fashionably blasé young workers sip on microbrews and eat pizza provided free on Friday afternoons.
- The perception that has been transmitted is one of blasé indifference.
- Composing myself, in my most blasé tone I casually asked the proprietor if he'd consider breaking up the set.
- I do not want to suggest that we can be blasé about individual protections, particularly in the face of large commercial interests.
- Perhaps the funniest thing about the movie though is the blasé attitude it takes about what it takes to get a movie written.
- Firms with a blasé attitude to security could see system downtime caused as a result of software vulnerabilities.
- Those who have a blasé approach to parking had better change their attitude or they could be hit very hard in their pockets.
- I had been complacent, even blasé, about someone who was really important to me.
- She comes across as simultaneously caring, blasé, jaded and extremely vulnerable.
- He seems so blasé, that it makes me wonder whether these sorts of deals occur all the time.
- My father was so ridiculously blasé about this whole episode that after getting out of the hospital he went out for ice cream.
- Of course, I don't want them to be as blasé about climate change as we are, but the alternative is for these countries to stay in poverty for even longer.
- Now that he is 45, the superior bit seems to have died down, perhaps to be replaced with a certain blasé nature.
- By this time he had almost achieved the blasé attitude of someone who didn't really care; almost, but not quite.
- If she is not entirely blasé about the attention focused on her, then she certainly gives the impression she can handle it.
- I was outraged by the blasé attitude of the programme manager for the environmental authority.
Synonyms indifferent to, unconcerned about, uncaring about, casual about, nonchalant about, offhand about, uninterested in, uninvolved in/with, apathetic towards, unimpressed by, bored by, weary of, unmoved by, unresponsive to, lukewarm about, unenthusiastic about, phlegmatic about impassive, dispassionate, emotionless, insouciant jaded, surfeited, glutted, cloyed, satiated rare pococurante
OriginEarly 19th century: French, past participle of blaser 'cloy', probably ultimately of Germanic origin. Definition of blasé in US English: blaséadjectiveblɑˈzeɪbläˈzā Unimpressed or indifferent to something because one has experienced or seen it so often before. (因司空见惯而)无动于衷的,漠不关心的 she was becoming quite blasé about the dangers 她变得对危险全然无动于衷。 Example sentencesExamples - Firms with a blasé attitude to security could see system downtime caused as a result of software vulnerabilities.
- As she speaks, fashionably blasé young workers sip on microbrews and eat pizza provided free on Friday afternoons.
- Of course, I don't want them to be as blasé about climate change as we are, but the alternative is for these countries to stay in poverty for even longer.
- The perception that has been transmitted is one of blasé indifference.
- I was outraged by the blasé attitude of the programme manager for the environmental authority.
- If she is not entirely blasé about the attention focused on her, then she certainly gives the impression she can handle it.
- Composing myself, in my most blasé tone I casually asked the proprietor if he'd consider breaking up the set.
- Now that he is 45, the superior bit seems to have died down, perhaps to be replaced with a certain blasé nature.
- Clearly, adopting a blasé attitude toward house prices has taken many years to achieve.
- All three men are blasé about the prospects of being burglarized.
- He seems so blasé, that it makes me wonder whether these sorts of deals occur all the time.
- I do not want to suggest that we can be blasé about individual protections, particularly in the face of large commercial interests.
- She comes across as simultaneously caring, blasé, jaded and extremely vulnerable.
- Am I a snob because the show leaves me unresponsive and blasé?
- Remember how, by the fifth snow shower, you'd become completely blasé about those falling flakes as if they were the most normal thing in the world?
- I had been complacent, even blasé, about someone who was really important to me.
- Perhaps the funniest thing about the movie though is the blasé attitude it takes about what it takes to get a movie written.
- My father was so ridiculously blasé about this whole episode that after getting out of the hospital he went out for ice cream.
- Those who have a blasé approach to parking had better change their attitude or they could be hit very hard in their pockets.
- By this time he had almost achieved the blasé attitude of someone who didn't really care; almost, but not quite.
Synonyms indifferent to, unconcerned about, uncaring about, casual about, nonchalant about, offhand about, uninterested in, uninvolved in, uninvolved with, apathetic towards, unimpressed by, bored by, weary of, unmoved by, unresponsive to, lukewarm about, unenthusiastic about, phlegmatic about
OriginEarly 19th century: French, past participle of blaser ‘cloy’, probably ultimately of Germanic origin. |