ambiguously / æmˈbɪg yu əs /

含糊不清地暧昧地歧义地含糊不清

ambiguously 的定义

adj. 形容词 adjective
  1. open to or having several possible meanings or interpretations; equivocal: an ambiguous answer.
  2. Linguistics. exhibiting constructional homonymity; having two or more structural descriptions, as the sequence Flying planes can be dangerous.
  3. of doubtful or uncertain nature; difficult to comprehend, distinguish, or classify: a rock of ambiguous character.
  4. lacking clearness or definiteness; obscure; indistinct: an ambiguous shape;an ambiguous future.

ambiguously 近义词

ambiguously

等同于 incoherently

ambiguously

等同于 vaguely

ambiguously 的近义词 4
ambiguously

等同于 doubtfully

更多ambiguously例句

  1. I feel this ambiguous connection to strangers I have had to avoid, and my soul demands exploration.
  2. In the mountains, on the other hand, there’s a pretty broad range of conditions where the decision is ambiguous.
  3. Rituals like writing letters to Santa, or leaving out milk and cookies on Christmas eve, reinforce their belief in these ambiguous figures.
  4. They began their study by noting that “the expected effect of smoking bans on drunk driving is ambiguous” since smokers might choose to go out less, lowering the number of people drinking in total.
  5. This question was ambiguous as to whether you simply wanted the smallest value of N or the smallest value of N that also resulted in the eliminations listed in the original problem.
  6. By the 1950s the rapid assignment of gender to an ambiguously gendered infant had become standard.
  7. But when he goes over a line that it is ambiguously drawn, then we erupt with outrage.
  8. The Daily Beast reached out to Feliciano for clarification about his "ambiguously gay" statement.
  9. The new version of the bill is so ambiguously written, it might be almost as discriminatory as the old version.
  10. After all, Shocked once—though ambiguously, and perhaps with the intent of provocation—insinuated that she was a lesbian.
  11. This prediction being delivered somewhat ambiguously, Hamilton misunderstood its meaning.
  12. All that enlightened men could do, was to speak ambiguously, hence they often confounded falsehood with truth.
  13. Here again the word Eotena is used ambiguously, but, I think, this time not without some indication of its meaning.
  14. “You could not do it,” she declared ambiguously, planting the last spray.
  15. Then, as things got worse and worse for her, he spoke again--ambiguously--a word or two, thrown out to sound the waters.