kaleidoscopic / kəˌlaɪ dəˈskɒp ɪk /

📖毕业后词汇万花筒式的万花筒万花筒状的万花筒式

kaleidoscopic 的定义

adj. 形容词 adjective
  1. of, relating to, or created by a kaleidoscope.
  2. changing form, pattern, color, etc., in a manner suggesting a kaleidoscope.
  3. continually shifting from one set of relations to another; rapidly changing: the kaleidoscopic events of the past year.

kaleidoscopic 近义词

adj. 形容词 adjective

multicolored

更多kaleidoscopic例句

  1. Yet in the years and decades afterward, I’ve seen flowers return in kaleidoscopic carpets.
  2. The spectacular kaleidoscopic effects are the result of charged particles from the Sun being dumped into the Earth's magnetosphere, where they collide with oxygen and nitrogen molecules—an interaction that excites those molecules and makes them glow.
  3. The Vox Book Club spent April reading Akwaeke Emezi’s The Death of Vivek Oji, a ferocious and kaleidoscopic novel about the mysterious death of a young man in Nigeria.
  4. In Akwaeki Emezi’s ferocious and kaleidoscopic novel, the real mystery is whether Vivek truly lived.
  5. That was the improbable genesis of “Midnight Cowboy,” the 1969 classic of two outcasts who find heartbreak and hope in the kaleidoscopic jungle of New York City.
  6. The kaleidoscopic mobile changes no matter how you look at it—or where you stand.
  7. It was both linear and kaleidoscopic, if that makes any sense.
  8. His Cezannes show the Frenchman at his most kaleidoscopic, breaking the world into shards.
  9. A kaleidoscopic installation of 650 quilts spirals up to the ceiling in a grand display.
  10. But Walter Harkness, standing at the window, stared out from troubled, frowning eyes that saw nothing of the kaleidoscopic scene.
  11. Boston's religious history is most interesting, although almost kaleidoscopic in its changes.
  12. The kaleidoscopic view came so fast that Anders had trouble sorting his new impressions.
  13. The whole cloak making trade of New York presents, for an outside observer, the kaleidoscopic interest of a population not static.
  14. In the swift and kaleidoscopic changes which occur in (p. 340) world politics, the friend of to-day may be the enemy of to-morrow.