jumble 的 3 个定义
jum·bled, jum·bling.
- to mix in a confused mass; put or throw together without order: You've jumbled up all the cards.
- to confuse mentally; muddle.
jum·bled, jum·bling.
- to be mixed together in a disorderly heap or mass.
- to meet or come together confusedly.
- a mixed or disordered heap or mass: a jumble of paper clips, rubber bands, and string.
- a confused mixture; medley.
- a state of confusion or disorder.
- Also jumbal. a small, round, flat cake or cookie with a hole in the middle.
jumble 近义词
hodgepodge
mix up, confuse
更多jumble例句
- When tested on a jumble of polyethylene, PET and EVOH beads, the solvent washes recovered more than 95 percent of each material — hinting that these solvents could be used to strip plastic components off bulkier items than packaging films.
- Sunday afternoon, a jumble of humanity bowled into Burrow’s left leg as he planted it to throw.
- While the microscopic deltamethrin crystals in the original spray have a haphazard structure, which looks like a jumble of misaligned flakes, the melted deltamethrin crystals solidified into starburst shapes when they cooled to room temperature.
- TikTok, as Wired pointed out last year, is a “brilliant design nightmare”—an endless scroll of 15-second videos that seem to play at random, with hard-to-read fonts, and a jumble of non-intuitive icons.
- In the hot rows, a jumble of multicolored wires crisscrosses in tangled skeins.
- A jumble of split screen video, audio snippets, on-site reporting, and commentary cut-aways followed.
- He poured heaps of them onto a bed and set about sorting the jumble of tiny vehicles.
- They just might get it—a jumble not just of selling points but complementary liabilities.
- An “overproduced, overblown, confusingly dark and laboriously ambitious jumble,” ruled Newsday.
- It pauses the careening jumble of events to carve out moments of stillness.
- Then he will vent upon you a torrent of abuse, ending in some jumble of socialistic ideas of his own concoction.
- It can only mislead and mystify and the greater part of the literature is a mere jumble of inaccurate and mystifying statements.
- I am writing opposite Lady Hamilton, therefore you will not be surprised at the glorious jumble of this letter.
- The jumble of the night had disintegrated most of the formed bodies, and the whole thing had the appearance of a vast dbcle.
- The camp was pitched at two hundred and eighty-three miles amidst a jumble of ramps and sastrugi.