minuscular / ˈmɪn əˌskyul, mɪˈnʌs kyul /

肌肉发达肌肉肌肉发达的人肌肉发达的人群

minuscular2 个定义

adj. 形容词 adjective
  1. very small.
  2. small; not capital.
  3. written in such letters.
n. 名词 noun
  1. a minuscule letter.
  2. a small cursive script developed in the 7th century a.d. from the uncial, which it afterward superseded.

minuscular 近义词

minuscular

等同于 tiny

minuscular

等同于 wee

minuscular

等同于 Lilliputian

minuscular

等同于 pintsize

minuscular

等同于 pintsized

minuscular

等同于 teensy

minuscular

等同于 teensy-weensy

minuscular

等同于 teeny-weeny

minuscular

等同于 weeny

更多minuscular例句

  1. In a preliminary study that has not yet been reviewed by other researchers, Ristenpart and his team found that homemade cotton masks can shed minuscule particles as people breathe.
  2. They are highly susceptible to disturbances from everything from stray magnetic fields to the minuscule imperfections in the control electronics or materials used to build the device.
  3. They predicted a similarly minuscule drop for September, to just over 10 percent.
  4. Radioactivity revealed a new sort of energy, of vast quantity, hidden within the most minuscule components of matter — the parts that made up atoms.
  5. Here and there, clumps of particles have created galaxies and stars, but these are just minuscule specks on an otherwise unblemished cosmic canvas.
  6. An appearance here during his 1993 comeback tour was cancelled following minuscule ticket sales.
  7. Hawking radiation for realistic black holes is a minuscule effect, and the bigger the black hole, the less radiation there is.
  8. Out of that minuscule number of bisexual roles, only two were male characters.
  9. The result is a far more advanced effort that features an investment in offices and staff that makes GOP efforts look minuscule.
  10. Havens thinks that the cost differences for consumers will be minuscule, according to rough model calculations.
  11. None the less it must be said for them that they take fairly good care of their minuscule quadrupeds.
  12. But some confusions of letters occur frequently in copies of uncial originals, and others in copies of minuscule originals.
  13. It is a large folio, finely written in a neat minuscule, mainly Saxon hand, with uncial initials in two columns.
  14. It seemed highly unconvincing, later, because some long-delayed perception produced a reaction in the dinies' minuscule brains.
  15. That's not a gigantic number, but it's not a minuscule one, either.