pitfall / ˈpɪtˌfɔl /

⚽高中词汇隐患陷阱陷井陷落

pitfall 的定义

n. 名词 noun
  1. a lightly covered and unnoticeable pit prepared as a trap for people or animals.
  2. any trap or danger for the unwary: the pitfall of excessive pride.

pitfall 近义词

n. 名词 noun

hazard, trap

更多pitfall例句

  1. It was an exhibit in the pitfalls of our reliance on technology.
  2. Ultimately, tapping or clicking that reset button can be scary, but your data should be fine as long as you consider the potential pitfalls and proceed carefully.
  3. Keeping players in one spot is an easy solution to avoiding the pitfalls of motion sickness.
  4. We’ve discussed the power and pitfalls of PPC automation at great length over the past year, in particular.
  5. It’s the second grant that the company has taken from the NSF and is an example of how startups can turn to government funding for capital and avoid some of the pitfalls of fundraising from venture capital.
  6. The second pitfall is that Tendulkar has given the reader little of what should be a gripping, meaningful story of his life.
  7. That is the most frequent logical pitfall into which Sherlock Holmes falls.
  8. Once the sound system started working again, the gathering hit yet another pitfall.
  9. It points up the major pitfall of academic boycotts, a pitfall so serious as to make them counterproductive.
  10. The Israel Project's novel defense of building civilian settlements in E1, however, has many a pitfall.
  11. Malcolm had foreseen this pitfall in the smooth road that was seemingly opening before him.
  12. The day Antler thought of making clothes for the boys, was the day they ran away to the pitfall.
  13. A still greater pitfall before us is that we read history not as men, but as gods, knowing the event.
  14. The lost man often discovered this pitfall by dropping suddenly through into the veranda.
  15. The floor is of oak, and kept in such a condition of polish as to be a pitfall and snare to any dancer not in constant practice.