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disjointedly

/dis-join-tid/US // dɪsˈdʒɔɪn tɪd //UK // (dɪsˈdʒɔɪntɪd) //

断断续续地,断断续续,断断续续的,断断续续地说

Related Words

Definitions

adj.形容词 adjective
  1. 1
    • : having the joints or connections separated: a disjointed fowl.
    • : disconnected; incoherent: a disjointed discourse.
    • : Entomology. disjunct.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • With such disjointed efforts, it’s no surprise that no consensus has surfaced.

  • The current ideas suggest the first system will miss, and the midweek threat looks disjointed for much in the way of snow.

  • Though I felt invested by the sheer strangeness of the story at first, it later becomes disjointed and lacks direction, much like the gameplay itself.

  • That some jurisdictions aren’t ordering all available vaccine while others beg for more goes to the heart of the disjointed immunization effort underway in the United States.

  • That is one of the goals that we have because they’re all over the place, they’re disjointed and that prevents us from moving forward.

  • The Obama administration is finally looking to fix its disjointed efforts to handle U.S. hostages.

  • As the United States becomes more and more disjointed, an increasing number of Americans favors abandoning the Union altogether.

  • It affects about 10 percent of patients, though the writing is often disjointed and difficult to read.

  • The possibilities are endless, and weirdly reassuring in these disjointed and murky times.

  • Over the past decade, the movement has grown organically online into a confederacy of somewhat disjointed causes.

  • Coronado spurred his horse down the rough, disjointed, slippery declivity, and the others followed.

  • As it was, the three were lolling in lazy attitudes, smoking their long-stemmed pipes and talking in a disjointed fashion.

  • For ofttimes he does sink into a deep reverie; and disjointed words break from him, which tell me whither his thoughts have flown.

  • Every few feet he stopped to shout disjointed explanations or profanity into Pelham's ear.

  • One man has a hump;—another can hardly see out of his imperfect eyes;—a third can barely utter a few disjointed words.