blunder / ˈblʌn dər /

💦中学词汇失误大错特错失策

blunder3 个定义

n. 名词 noun
  1. a gross, stupid, or careless mistake: That's your second blunder this morning.
v. 无主动词 verb
  1. to move or act blindly, stupidly, or without direction or steady guidance: Without my glasses I blundered into the wrong room.
  2. to make a gross or stupid mistake, especially through carelessness or mental confusion: Just pray that he doesn't blunder again and get the names wrong.
v. 有主动词 verb
  1. to bungle; botch: Several of the accounts were blundered by that new assistant.
  2. to utter thoughtlessly; blurt out: He blundered his surprise at their winning the award.

blunder 近义词

n. 名词 noun

mistake

v. 动词 verb

make mistake

更多blunder例句

  1. They minimize delays and blunders in customer service, and can also guide visitors to various parts of your website, allowing you to automate tedious aspects of customer service and focus efforts on tasks that move prospects further down the funnel.
  2. The alleged tampering blunder with Bogdanovic felt so crushing because Milwaukee has limited salary cap flexibility to fill that glaring need.
  3. All that said, Coinbase has seen firsthand that turning a blind eye to politics can lead to huge business blunders.
  4. As a result of the blunder, a plan was quashed for Recombinetics to raise an experimental herd in Brazil.
  5. Stopping to question your motives is the first step to harnessing the power of trending keywords without making a marketing blunder.
  6. “The rape question was a tremendous blunder,” Doar later observed.
  7. But that the CNN-John King blunder even happened is a cause for alarm.
  8. He said the desperate, unplanned rush north was “the biggest blunder of the campaign.”
  9. I tried a half-dozen other representatives, none who could remedy the blunder, all who cited different reasons for the occurrence.
  10. Above all, this is not the time to blunder into horrendous religious and civil wars with direct and extensive U.S. military force.
  11. I must make no mistake, and blunder into a national type of features, all wrong; if I make your mask, it must do us credit.
  12. So far, so good; but, in another quarter, Allcraft suddenly discovered that he had committed an egregious blunder.
  13. By some extraordinary blunder of the commissariat the 32d had set forth that morning without breaking their fast.
  14. His gay debonair manner and his ready apology for his own blunder pleased Mrs. Calvert.
  15. The insertion of whyte in l. 905, in the existing authorities, is surely a blunder, and I therefore have omitted it.