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cacophonic

/kuh-kof-uh-nee/US // kəˈkɒf ə ni //UK // (kəˈkɒfənɪ) //

喧闹的声音,喧嚣的声音,喧嚣,喧闹声

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1

    plural ca·coph·o·nies.

    • : harsh discordance of sound; dissonance: a cacophony of hoots, cackles, and wails.
    • : a discordant and meaningless mixture of sounds: the cacophony produced by city traffic at midday.
    • : Music. frequent use of discords of a harshness and relationship difficult to understand.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • It’s akin to playing neuronal “piano keys” into a melody that makes sense to the brain, rather than simultaneously pounding them into neurological cacophony.

  • On Saturday night, the walls of the Kennedy Center Opera House capably blocked out the celebratory cacophony of horns and hollering that overtook the city.

  • Overtoning allows us to incorporate plenty of herbs, spices or other closely related ingredients in a dish without it turning into a cacophony of contrasting elements.

  • Working at home is essentially like working in the most extreme open plan office—prone to the cacophony and clutter we once complained about when we were actually sitting at a proper desk in the office.

  • Enterprise location marketers definitely want choice but not the confusion and cacophony of too-many companies, which has defined this segment over the past half decade.

  • Most Cacophony events were one-off affairs, just enough to jam the culture a bit before moving on.

  • “The idea was to mess with the concept of Christmas,” recalled John Law, an original Cacophony member.

  • Any upcoming release of a new Apple product guarantees a deafening cacophony of idle speculation from tech sites.

  • Badges hanging from their necks boast small national flags, and a cacophony of accents represents more than 20 countries.

  • For Clinton and the Democrats, the cacophony out of Arizona is music to their ears.

  • His huge hand caught the hypnotic stone and swept it into crashing, ear-splitting cacophony against the cold steel bulkhead.

  • You think youse The rest was jumbled up or lost in the usual cacophony of the thoroughfare.

  • Human intrusion brought a constant cacophony of cries and chattered complaints from birds and beasts.

  • Consequently they have sacrificed their Italian birthright of melody for all kinds of cacophony.

  • The old Flemish joyousness of colour passed into a consumptive cacophony.