anticlimactic / ˌæn ti klaɪˈmæk tɪk, -klə-, ˌæn taɪ- /

📖毕业后词汇反高潮反例反常的反常

anticlimactic 的定义

adj. 形容词 adjective
  1. of, like, pertaining to, or expressing anticlimax.

anticlimactic 近义词

anticlimactic

等同于 ineffective/ineffectual

anticlimactic

等同于 ineffective

anticlimactic

等同于 inefficacious

更多anticlimactic例句

  1. The Greens reached nearly 15 percent of the vote, a real expansion of their representation in parliament, but it felt a bit anticlimactic for the party after it once led the race.
  2. Along with the sparse, anticlimactic but occasionally transcendent Tokyo Olympics, the past month’s best programming has gone hard on sun and fun.
  3. The 2021 Oscars, like the year they celebrated, were destined to be the most anticlimactic ever Scott Rudin’s bad behavior was just another Hollywood cliche until a new generation said time’s up
  4. It was also the rare Oscars upset that is truly satisfying — a rich payoff for all of us who’ve stayed up watching this show to the bitter, usually-anticlimactic end every year.
  5. And the report is anticlimactic in political terms because the damage has been done.
  6. Politically, this new report “clearing” Chris Christie is anticlimactic and largely irrelevant.
  7. It would be disappointing and anticlimactic in the extreme if they broker a deal at this meeting they're having tonight at 6:00.
  8. The song was an anticlimactic ending to a shareholder meeting that had initially promised fireworks.
  9. The rest of the debate was only anticlimactic by comparison.
  10. The rest of the tests, you can imagine, were almost anticlimactic.
  11. His polished spear, when he stood it beside him, was almost anticlimactic.
  12. And all the journey back to Darth was as anticlimactic as that.