fluffed / flʌf /

蓬松的蓬乱的蓬头垢面蓬头垢面的

fluffed3 个定义

n. 名词 noun
  1. light, downy particles, as of cotton.
  2. a soft, light, downy mass: a fluff of summer clouds.
  3. something of no consequence: The book is pure fluff, but fun to read.
  4. an error or blunder, especially an actor's memory lapse in the delivery of lines.
v. 有主动词 verb
  1. to make into fluff; shake or puff out into a fluffy mass: to fluff up the sofa pillows.
  2. to make a mistake in: The leading man fluffed his lines.
v. 无主动词 verb
  1. to become fluffy; move, float, or settle down like fluff.
  2. to make a mistake, especially in the delivery of lines by a performer; blunder.

fluffed 近义词

fluffed

等同于 wrong

fluffed

等同于 slip

fluffed

等同于 criticize

fluffed

等同于 falter

fluffed

等同于 fumble

更多fluffed例句

  1. That being said, don’t add fluff to increase the word count — visitors will easily recognize if you do and this will lead to a poor user experience.
  2. The staff had to navigate the recruiting process during a pandemic, but Locksley said that took “the fluff out of recruiting.”
  3. PrimaLoft has devised a new way to create the fluff that goes in jackets without requiring the heat from those dirty ovens.
  4. In 2020, the ideal blog post length should be between 2,100 and 2,400 words – enough to thoroughly discuss a topic with authority, but not too long that fluff would be inevitable.
  5. It means you should go easy on fluff words and adopt an expository style of writing.
  6. After missing that mark with the empty-calorie fluff of Salem, WGN is nailing it with Manhattan.
  7. Hard-nosed criticism is squeezed out by soft stories, gossip and fluff.
  8. Some of the fur pieces even looked like little animals with big eyes, staring out from beyond the fluff.
  9. Despite all his high-points value moves, Obama is losing his game of Words With Americans by spouting fluff.
  10. Unlike hoity-toity displays of pedigree fluff, the Average Joe Cat Show is a celebration of middling felines.
  11. Because that little fluff of a Mrs Everett is too good-natured to kill or to direct the killing of anybody.
  12. Oh, Mary had a little Lamb, regarding whose cuticular The fluff exterior was white and kinked in each particular.
  13. The fluff from the work seemed to smother Connie that morning.
  14. The Rector was sitting in the library, hard at work rubbing the fluff from the anemone seeds with sand.
  15. Valeria gave a cry; she opened the little fist, and saw the soft black fluff lying there.