网站首页  词典首页

请输入您要查询的词汇:

 

词汇 heavy-handed
释义

Definition of heavy-handed in English:

heavy-handed

adjectiveˌhɛvɪˈhandɪdˈˌhɛvi ˈˌhændəd
  • 1Clumsy, insensitive, or overly forceful.

    笨拙的;粗手粗脚的;过分强制的

    heavy-handed policing

    过分强制的治安行动。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Three years of protests is a long time in a city where the police have developed a reputation for using heavy-handed tactics against demonstrators.
    • The protesters also want an end to the heavy-handed police tactics that led to the killing of the four demonstrators last week.
    • But Ms Smith, who got caught up in the brawl, said she would be complaining to the police about their heavy-handed approach.
    • Surely the police response was a bit heavy-handed - what order were they disrupting anyhow?
    • Outraged republicans accused the police of heavy-handed tactics.
    • The heavy-handed tactics resulted in sporadic clashes between protesters and police and numerous arrests.
    • But protesters claimed they had not come to fight and many accused the police of heavy-handed tactics and attacking them for no reason.
    • In Portugal handcuffed and hung over hooligans whinge about heavy-handed police tactics and plead their innocence.
    • This was particularly the case in Brixton where the riots are thought to have been sparked off by a certain degree of insensitive and heavy-handed policing.
    • Pub landlord Paul Morris criticised police for being heavy-handed and has disputed that any drugs were found.
    • It's a good thing the scene was deleted, as it's heavy-handed and the dialogue is awkward.
    • Around fifteen people were arrested after heavy-handed tactics were employed by police.
    • My apologies to the author for what may well be rather heavy-handed paraphrasing of his often quite poetic prose.
    • It is narrative driven, without being heavy-handed or overly literal.
    • The riots were seen specifically as anti-police demonstrations provoked by heavy-handed police harassment.
    • Police used heavy-handed tactics to disperse the protesters.
    • They warned, however, that a heavy-handed police response could trigger mass protests.
    • Some say the police did it to gain sympathy for the coming heavy-handed police tactics at the summit.
    • Too often they came across as gimmicks, awkward and heavy-handed.
    • Killing the arsonist was both heavy-handed and bound to attract further police attention.
    Synonyms
    clumsy, awkward, maladroit, unhandy, inept, unskilful, inexpert, graceless, ungraceful
    informal ham-handed, ham-fisted, cack-handed
    British informal all thumbs, all fingers and thumbs
    insensitive, oppressive, overbearing, high-handed, harsh, hard, stern, severe, tyrannical, despotic, autocratic, ruthless, merciless
    tactless, undiplomatic, thoughtless, inconsiderate, inept
    1. 1.1 Using too much of something.
      用得太多的,大手大脚的
      beware of being heavy-handed with the flour

      注意不要用太多面粉。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • This intrusion shows how heavy-handed the movie's efforts to be relevant and political are.

Derivatives

  • heavy-handedly

  • adverbˌhɛvɪˈhandɪdli
    • Overall, Lantos comes out heavy-handedly against the idea of publicly held companies being expected to be ethically altruistic.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • It's one thing to heavy-handedly engineer a pesticide into every cell of a crop; it's quite another to manage the ecological interrelationships of the farm so that the offending insect is controlled by the natural balances.
      • The gap between the corrupt ruling class and the poor is wide and deep and he captures the unrest both too heavy-handedly and incredibly subtly.
      • It is 1980s country house hotel cooking: complicated, rich, protein-intensive, heavy-handedly peppered with foods that shriek out Scottishness.
      • The basic plot points were delivered heavy-handedly at the beginning, but many things were not explained clearly after that, so I spent much of the first half of the film trying to figure out who people were.
      • A group of four friends are debating - somewhat heavy-handedly - whether the nature of life is essentially tragic or comic.
      • Some moderators look at themselves as lords of mini-fiefdoms, abusing the power that moderation gives them and heavy-handedly ordering people around, or else warning participants not to do anything to anger them.
      • The brothers wanted to explore the theme of transition, but the angel motif is used so literally and heavy-handedly that the film threatens to sink under the weight of its own feathers.
      • He expresses a few phrases of Oriental philosophy, but not as heavy-handedly as he did in the movies of the 1930s and 1940s.
      • Sometimes this is dealt with rather heavy-handedly.
      • A truly intrusive and irritating score, which heavy-handedly underlines every ‘poignant’ moment, only reinforces this condescending tendency.
      • I really think it's just an extension of that adolescent need to define one's individuality as heavy-handedly as possible, but specifically in the area of intelligence.
      • The works, intentionally filled with corrections, are heavy-handedly drawn and messily painted with the naivety of a beginning art student.
      • As an added inducement, it was heavy-handedly hinted that co-operation by Bucharest would assist Romania's ambition to join the European Union.
      • The film is cheerfully anachronistic - sometimes too heavy-handedly so.
      • It has however indicated that it would not act heavy-handedly on 1 October and impose sanctions immediately against US exports to the EU, but first try to seek an amicable agreement for compensation.
  • heavy-handedness

  • noun
    • If a controversial EU directive becomes law next week, such heavy-handedness will become the norm across Europe whenever copyright owners claim to be the victims of ‘piracy’.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Critics have been quick to accuse the monolith of Soviet-style heavy-handedness for this particular innovation, but given that the only real inconvenience this poses is making it harder to pirate the stuff, we can't really complain.
      • In talking with him before coming on the air, as to what made him switch parties in 1994, and he was saying it was the heavy-handedness of the administration at the time, that of course being President Clinton.
      • With such heavy-handedness behind the camera, I'm not sure how talented actors could emerge with any autonomy or achieve any genuine soul-bearing.
      • These tactics not only failed to engage the guerrillas, who easily evaded the large jungle sweeps, but their heavy-handedness alienated the local population.
      • It made me reflect on the pronouncements of those engaged in the recent civil disobedience in Edinburgh about ‘fascist states’ and police heavy-handedness.
      • I feel it was much lighter on the heavy-handedness and sensationalism that characterizes much of his other work, and thank God for that.
      • The first reaction was to applaud the rioting children and to complain of police heavy-handedness.
      • The heavy-handedness of local officials has been partly to blame for increases in rural instability that in recent years have seen pitched battles between police and farmers.
      • He said: ‘It's the heavy-handedness of the police, they are making a bad situation worse.’
      • This heavy-handedness - ‘We're going to tell you what's good for you’ - just turned around and destroyed people's business.
      • The government is acting in line with its age-old propensity for heavy-handedness.
      • Still, they avoid heavy-handedness and are mostly quite charming.
      • Their grievances were oppressive and unfair taxation, heavy-handedness of the authorities, and lack of political representation.
      • Those present at protests on both the Friday and Saturday claim that police heavy-handedness in Toronto was taken to a whole new level.
      • They manage this despite some serious heavy-handedness in the script.
      • Their on-screen graphics take far too much of the screen too - another manifestation of their bullish ignorant heavy-handedness.
      • Additionally, Greek attempts at restoration during the twentieth century have been equally criticised for their insensitivity and heavy-handedness.
      • This, however, did nothing to change the perception of heavy-handedness.
      • Meanwhile, here in London, events passed off peacefully amidst accusations of police heavy-handedness.

Rhymes

backhanded, candid, candied, high-handed, offhanded, red-handed, short-handed, unbranded, underhanded

Definition of heavy-handed in US English:

heavy-handed

adjectiveˈˌhevē ˈˌhandədˈˌhɛvi ˈˌhændəd
  • 1Clumsy or insensitive.

    this heavy-handed prose is merely tiresome
    Example sentencesExamples
    • It's a good thing the scene was deleted, as it's heavy-handed and the dialogue is awkward.
    • Police used heavy-handed tactics to disperse the protesters.
    • Some say the police did it to gain sympathy for the coming heavy-handed police tactics at the summit.
    • But Ms Smith, who got caught up in the brawl, said she would be complaining to the police about their heavy-handed approach.
    • Three years of protests is a long time in a city where the police have developed a reputation for using heavy-handed tactics against demonstrators.
    • In Portugal handcuffed and hung over hooligans whinge about heavy-handed police tactics and plead their innocence.
    • The riots were seen specifically as anti-police demonstrations provoked by heavy-handed police harassment.
    • Too often they came across as gimmicks, awkward and heavy-handed.
    • Outraged republicans accused the police of heavy-handed tactics.
    • The heavy-handed tactics resulted in sporadic clashes between protesters and police and numerous arrests.
    • It is narrative driven, without being heavy-handed or overly literal.
    • The protesters also want an end to the heavy-handed police tactics that led to the killing of the four demonstrators last week.
    • This was particularly the case in Brixton where the riots are thought to have been sparked off by a certain degree of insensitive and heavy-handed policing.
    • Killing the arsonist was both heavy-handed and bound to attract further police attention.
    • Pub landlord Paul Morris criticised police for being heavy-handed and has disputed that any drugs were found.
    • But protesters claimed they had not come to fight and many accused the police of heavy-handed tactics and attacking them for no reason.
    • Around fifteen people were arrested after heavy-handed tactics were employed by police.
    • Surely the police response was a bit heavy-handed - what order were they disrupting anyhow?
    • My apologies to the author for what may well be rather heavy-handed paraphrasing of his often quite poetic prose.
    • They warned, however, that a heavy-handed police response could trigger mass protests.
    Synonyms
    clumsy, awkward, maladroit, unhandy, inept, unskilful, inexpert, graceless, ungraceful
    insensitive, oppressive, overbearing, high-handed, harsh, hard, stern, severe, tyrannical, despotic, autocratic, ruthless, merciless
    1. 1.1 Overly forceful or oppressive.
      the government's most heavy-handed efforts to muzzle social protest
      Example sentencesExamples
      • This intrusion shows how heavy-handed the movie's efforts to be relevant and political are.
随便看

 

春雷网英语在线翻译词典收录了464360条英语词汇在线翻译词条,基本涵盖了全部常用英语词汇的中英文双语翻译及用法,是英语学习的有利工具。

 

Copyright © 2000-2024 Sndmkt.com All Rights Reserved 更新时间:2024/12/28 15:15:52