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idiosyncratic

/id-ee-oh-sin-krat-ik, -sing-/US // ˌɪd i oʊ sɪnˈkræt ɪk, -sɪŋ- //UK // (ˌɪdɪəʊsɪŋˈkrætɪk) //

特异性,特异性的,特异功能,特有的

Related Words

Definitions

adj.形容词 adjective
  1. 1
    • : pertaining to the nature of idiosyncrasy, or something peculiar to an individual: The best minds are idiosyncratic and unpredictable as they follow the course of scientific discovery.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • Regardless of the makeup of grapes in the bottle, with grower Champagne you are tasting the individual winemaker’s vision — something definitionally idiosyncratic, and sometimes a little peculiar, but always compelling.

  • I suspect there was also a question of whether such an idiosyncratic product would translate.

  • In any other year, some idiosyncratic combination would likely come to mind.

  • It’s also possible the Aces’ style will be less effective in a playoff series, when their opponent is able to spend more time game planning against their idiosyncratic tendencies.

  • The New York Times takes its headlining choices very seriously, but as we learned from thumbing through years of its headlines, it also makes some idiosyncratic choices.

  • Her striking new, vinyl-only single once again confirms St. Vincent's idiosyncratic talent.

  • However, there are a handful of new or idiosyncratic items that I throw into the conversation.

  • In 2012, Bentivolio filed as a long-shot primary candidate to take on idiosyncratic five-term incumbent Thaddeus McCotter.

  • He dropped a few hints about the “small,” “idiosyncratic” black-and-white movie that he will shoot after he finishes Crimson Peak.

  • So did drivers across Europe, who launched their own idiosyncratic protests Wednesday.

  • Perhaps for the first time in his life Edward Henry intimately understood what idiosyncratic elegance was.

  • Thus they tend to be more personal, more idiosyncratic, than in a book it would be lawful for a writer to be.

  • Indeed, those having an idiosyncratic susceptibility to alkaloids should be temperate in the use of tea, coffee, or cocoa.

  • Mr. Phoebus pursued a life in his island partly feudal, partly Oriental, partly Venetian, and partly idiosyncratic.

  • Under dosage, the circular states: A few patients may be idiosyncratic to the iodides and find they cannot take oxyl-iodide.

idiosyncratic - EE Dictionary | EE Dictionary