bungle 的 3 个定义
bun·gled, bun·gling.
- to do clumsily and awkwardly; botch: He bungled the job.
bun·gled, bun·gling.
- to perform or work clumsily or inadequately: He is a fool who bungles consistently.
- a bungling performance.
- that which has been done clumsily or inadequately.
bungle 近义词
blunder, mess up
更多bungle例句
- Tatum and Hill reunite in 22 Jump Street as Jenko and Schmidt, hapless cops who go undercover as students to bungle a drug ring.
- The Yankees have been paying for this $270 million bungle—enabled by some savvy advice from Goldman Sachs—ever since.
- Every Senator who voted for Obamacare is accused of being the 60th vote, but few managed to bungle the process as badly as Nelson.
- The Bergamots do have a beautiful life—a life they bungle out of fear, vanity, desperation, and love.
- It was watching the military bungle one such investigation that eventually caused Jacob to leave the service.
- I never knew him bungle over a rope or make a bad slip, and it was simply a pleasure to see him steer.
- In practically all crimes attempted by scientists they bungle their jobs completely.
- I am sure the snarling Beasts could never bungle Life as men do, darling, Who half know.
- Not very seriously, I am afraid, lamented Nathalie, judging from the bungle I made in trying to learn that square knot.
- "I'm afraid I shall make a worse bungle of it than I did of the toast," he said, as he saw her folding her hands with delight.