dickens 的定义
dickens 近义词
等同于 mischievous
dickens 的近义词 48 个
- impish
- malicious
- naughty
- playful
- rude
- sly
- arch
- artful
- bad
- bothersome
- damaging
- dangerous
- deleterious
- destructive
- detrimental
- evil
- exasperating
- foxy
- frolicsome
- harmful
- hazardous
- holy terror
- hurtful
- ill
- ill-behaved
- injurious
- insidious
- irksome
- malignant
- misbehaving
- nocuous
- perilous
- pernicious
- precarious
- puckish
- rascal
- rascally
- risky
- sinful
- spiteful
- sportive
- teasing
- tricky
- troublesome
- vexatious
- vexing
- vicious
- wayward
dickens 的反义词 5 个
等同于 urchin
dickens 的近义词 9 个
等同于 child
dickens 的近义词 53 个
- adolescent
- baby
- infant
- juvenile
- kid
- minor
- offspring
- teenager
- toddler
- youngster
- youth
- babe
- bairn
- bambino
- brat
- cherub
- chick
- cub
- descendant
- imp
- innocent
- issue
- lamb
- mite
- moppet
- neonate
- nestling
- newborn
- nipper
- nursling
- preteen
- progeny
- shaver
- sprout
- squirt
- stripling
- suckling
- tadpole
- teen
- tot
- tyke
- urchin
- whippersnapper
- anklebiter
- kiddie
- little angel
- little darling
- little doll
- little one
- pubescent
- small fry
- teenybopper
- young one
dickens 的反义词 2 个
等同于 tot
dickens 的近义词 53 个
- adolescent
- baby
- infant
- juvenile
- kid
- minor
- offspring
- teenager
- toddler
- youngster
- youth
- babe
- bairn
- bambino
- brat
- cherub
- chick
- cub
- descendant
- imp
- innocent
- issue
- lamb
- mite
- moppet
- neonate
- nestling
- newborn
- nipper
- nursling
- preteen
- progeny
- shaver
- sprout
- squirt
- stripling
- suckling
- tadpole
- teen
- tot
- tyke
- urchin
- whippersnapper
- anklebiter
- kiddie
- little angel
- little darling
- little doll
- little one
- pubescent
- small fry
- teenybopper
- young one
dickens 的反义词 2 个
等同于 devil
更多dickens例句
- In 1843, when Dickens published A Christmas Carol, Christmas was often treated as just another day, with few people even getting time off work — that’s why Bob Cratchit asks if he can have the day off.
- Mead’s performance of the Dickens play has been presented at the Dickens Festival in England and at arts centers, schools, churches, and private events around the world.
- Dickens grew up in a London where child labor was ruthlessly exploited.
- The book is broken into what Dickens calls staves, not chapters.
- Dickens was a master of heart-wrenching pathos because he felt every pain as he wrote.
- Flaubert, for instance, hated the works of Dickens: “What defective composition!”
- In his opulent maroon suit, Dickens flaunts his fame and fortune with so little subtlety he makes Kanye West appear modest.
- I study your language in your Dickens, in your Thackeray; at last I attain proficiency.
- I never now see our young people, or their elders either, affected by an author as we were then by the power of Dickens.
- She had expected to cry herself to sleep; instead she read Dickens with Mr. Hammerton until the new year was upon them.
- One will not fully appreciate Chigwell and its inn unless he has read Dickens' story.
- The bar-room, no doubt, is still much the same as on the stormy night which Dickens chose for the opening of his story.