disastrous 的定义
- causing great distress or injury; ruinous; very unfortunate; calamitous: The rain and cold proved disastrous to his health.
- Archaic. foreboding disaster.
disastrous 近义词
detrimental, devastating
更多disastrous例句
- Decades of rushing to stamp out flames that naturally clear out small trees and undergrowth have had disastrous unintended consequences.
- If the TV doesn’t know exactly how long your soundbar will take, it may send the video before the soundbar has finished, leading to a disastrous mismatch of the mouths on screen.
- Furthermore, in all three of these cases, poorly informed decisions set a disastrous chain of events in motion.
- Such publication often had disastrous consequences for the person “outed” in print.
- The disease would likely spread, which would be disastrous for many people beyond just you.
- He knew that a public appearance with Duke could be disastrous.
- At any moment, the slightest loss in concentration could see a disastrous tumble.
- The Ebola pandemic in West Africa is having a disastrous effect on tourism on the whole continent.
- But the consequences of a filing would have been disastrous.
- Another memorable, if not disastrous, misstep, of course, was his turn as Batman in Batman and Robin.
- The promises of Bellamy and Planner were as far from fulfilment as ever; their performance as vigorous and disastrous as at first.
- And new consequences, still more disastrous than any she had foreseen, presented themselves one after another.
- The following might have been more disastrous in its results; the same parties were concerned.
- One way alone offered—to break the disastrous contracts by payments made down without delay.
- Besides, the storm that had threatened on the night of his first visit had proved a most disastrous one.