Skip to main content

half-raw

/raw/US // rɔ //UK // (rɔː) //

半生不熟,半拉子,半生不熟的,半生熟

Related Words

Definitions

adj.形容词 adjective
  1. 1

    raw·er, raw·est.

    • : uncooked, as articles of food: a raw carrot.
    • : not having undergone processes of preparing, dressing, finishing, refining, or manufacture: raw cotton.
    • : unnaturally or painfully exposed, as flesh, by removal of the skin or natural integument.
    • : painfully open, as a sore or wound.
    • : crude in quality or character; not tempered or refined by art or taste: raw humor.
    • : ignorant, inexperienced, or untrained: a raw recruit.
    • : brutally or grossly frank: a raw portrayal of human passions.
    • : brutally harsh or unfair: a raw deal; receiving raw treatment from his friends.
    • : disagreeably damp and chilly, as the weather or air: a raw, foggy day at the beach.
    • : not diluted, as alcoholic spirits: raw whiskey.
    • : unprocessed or unevaluated: raw data.
n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : a sore or irritated place, as on the flesh.
    • : unrefined sugar, oil, etc.

Phrases

  • raw deal
  • in the altogether (raw)

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • Rather, they house enough of the raw ingredients to create water when heated.

  • Some of the elements on a printed circuit board, essentially the brain of a computer, are raw materials whose supply is at risk.

  • It was less a joke than a vote of confidence that in an age of extreme building — the Eiffel Tower, the Brooklyn Bridge and more — anything was possible if you just had enough raw material and the chutzpah to defy known limitations.

  • It’s the same reaction that powers all stars, and trying to corral that kind of raw power and turn it into something we can use effectively is a challenge scientists have been struggling with for decades.

  • This why testimonial link building is seen as a great way to harness this raw strength of positive experiences by customers.

  • Raw eel seemed to be popular during and after the Middle Ages.

  • The script would be used as more than just raw material, but would need to be fudged.

  • The raw materials— tin, tantalum, tungsten and gold—were dubbed “conflict minerals.”

  • But there was a lot of raw violence in the humor of the time.

  • But the raw believability of, say, Magnum photography has been done for.

  • It makes out of the savage raw material which is our basal mental stuff, a citizen.

  • It had come on to rain, and the raw dampness mingled itself with the dusky uproar of the Strand.

  • The evening was cold and raw and so dark that it was almost impossible to distinguish people on the badly lighted little platform.

  • This problem was solved by a native coming along driving a raw-boned horse before a rickety wagon.

  • The comparison of the cost of production, therefore, with the value of the raw material, shows a very large margin of profit.