hodgepodge
英 ['hɒdʒpɒdʒ]
美['hɑdʒpɑdʒ]
- n. 大杂烩;混煮;一团糟
- vt. 使混乱
英英释义
- 1. a motley assortment of things
- 2. a theory or argument made up of miscellaneous or incongruous ideas
实用场景例句
- ...a hodgepodge of maps, small tools, and notebooks.
- 地图、小工具和笔记本胡乱堆在一起
柯林斯高阶英语词典
- This box is a hodgepodge of books, old toys and things.
- 这个箱子里,书 、 旧玩具及其他物品混杂在一起.
辞典例句
- When I dipped closer, I saw they were in a hodgepodge of dark uniforms.
- 我降得更低些, 发现他们穿着深色杂乱的越共服装.
期刊摘选
- In short, it's a bit of hodgepodge, full of stark contrasts.
- 简而言之, 有点儿像大杂烩, 反差强烈.
期刊摘选
- Nothing frustrates nontechnical people more than having to navigate an uncoordinated hodgepodge of screens and approaches.
- 没有一样东西比必须在各种屏幕和方法不协调的大杂烩中漫游,更能使非技术人员沮丧.
期刊摘选
- Then, the cat attacks hodgepodge was initiated collect post, draft the will of TA.
- 于是, 猫扑大杂烩发起了征集帖, 征集TA的 愿望.
期刊摘选
- The Hutts are a hodgepodge of evolutionary traits.
- 赫特人综合了各种进化特征.
期刊摘选
- The millions of Web pages out there make up an eclectic hodgepodge of information and opinion.
- 数以百万计的网页组成了一个信息的大杂质烩.
期刊摘选
- But this kind of exhibition is easyly to be made into hodgepodge.
- 但是这种展览也容易做成大杂烩.
期刊摘选
- The region became a hodgepodge of languages and dialects, some from the east, some from the south and some from other countries entirely.
- 这个地区成为语言和方言的大杂烩,有些来自东部,有些来自南部,而有些完全是来自别的国家。
辞典例句
双语例句
- 1. The region became a hodgepodge of languages and dialects, some from the east, some from the south and some from other countries entirely.
- 这个地区成为语言和方言的大杂烩,有些来自东部,有些来自南部,而有些完全是来自别的国家。
来自辞典例句
- 2. This box is a hodgepodge of books, old toys and things.
- 这个箱子里,书 、 旧玩具及其他物品混杂在一起.
来自辞典例句
- 3. Fang Hung - chien wished he could have said, No wonder your honorable work is such a hodgepodge.
- 方鸿 渐 恨不能说: “怪不得阁下的大作也是那样斑驳陆离.
来自汉英文学 - 围城
- 4. In short, it's a bit of hodgepodge, full of stark contrasts.
- 简而言之, 有点儿像大杂烩, 反差强烈.
来自互联网
- 5. But this kind of exhibition is easyly to be made into hodgepodge.
- 但是这种展览也容易做成大杂烩.
来自互联网
英文词源
- hodgepodge (n.)
- also hodge podge, hodge-podge, early 15c., hogpoch, alteration of hotchpotch (late 14c.) "a kind of stew," especially "one made with goose, herbs, spices, wine, and other ingredients," earlier an Anglo-French legal term (late 13c.) meaning "collection of property in a common 'pot' before dividing it equally," from Old French hochepot "stew, soup," first element from hocher "to shake," from a Germanic source (such as Middle High German hotzen "shake").