dazzle 的 3 个定义
daz·zled, daz·zling.
- to overpower or dim the vision of by intense light: He was dazzled by the sudden sunlight.
- to impress deeply; astonish with delight: The glorious palace dazzled him.
daz·zled, daz·zling.
- to shine or reflect brilliantly: gems dazzling in the sunlight.
- to be overpowered by light: Her eyes dazzled in the glare.
- to excite admiration by brilliance: Once one is accustomed to such splendor, it no longer dazzles.
- an act or instance of dazzling: the dazzle of the spotlights.
- something that dazzles.
dazzle 近义词
confuse, amaze
更多dazzle例句
- The show’s musical elements, including several full-song performances in each hour, dazzle.
- Any stall of any possession seemed lethal given the opposition ready to take the football and dazzle.
- It was a dose of dazzle for a talented offense that has seemed staid in spots this season.
- But he did speak to the issue of the razzle-dazzle camera moves, at least indirectly.
- That kind of behavior would be in keeping with somebody who had been slipped a date rape drug such as Midazolam, aka Dazzle.
- Movies are meant to dazzle, and American Hustle does just that.
- There was a kinetic energy, a vibrancy that leapt off the screen that did, indeed, dazzle.
- But it was too late, as critics and audiences had already written it off once the show failed to dazzle them from the outset.
- He supposed they had scoured all Jursa for a real beauty to dazzle him; but they would discover that it would not work.
- But to do this I must dazzle him into giving me a great pleasure.
- There lay his wife in all the finery she had arrayed herself to dazzle her fashionable acquaintances, a speechless corpse!
- It did not dazzle me, however; it simply filled me, and gave me a sensation of peculiar buoyancy.
- His prey would be driven out of its hiding-place by smoke, or the torch would dazzle it.