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whimpering

/hwim-per, wim-/US // ˈʰwɪm pər, ˈwɪm- //UK // (ˈwɪmpə) //

呜呜咽咽,呜呜咽咽的,呜呜声,呜呜呜

Related Words

Definitions

v.无主动词 verb
  1. 1
    • : to cry with low, plaintive, broken sounds.
v.有主动词 verb
  1. 1
    • : to utter in a whimper.
n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : a whimpering cry or sound.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • Experts have long predicted that the pandemic will end with a whimper, not a bang.

  • For instance, stars burn through their hydrogen fuel, puff up and eventually expel their gases into space, whether with a bang or a whimper.

  • Yet, rather than following the path laid out in its shadow docket decisions this term, Fulton ended instead with a whimper.

  • For much of its run, Game of Thrones was the biggest show on television, and then it went out with a whimper.

  • Dems in disarrayThe 2020 election ended in a whimper yesterday evening, when Democrat Rita Hart suspended her challenge to the results in Iowa's 2nd Congressional District.

  • Did the French monarchy end not with a bang—or a whimper—but a smile?

  • As ends of eras go, he recalls, it was mostly whimper and not much bang.

  • Democratic capitalism had won the Cold War not with a bang, but a whimper.

  • In Kyushu, where the yakuza are deeply rooted, they are not leaving with a whimper, they are leaving with a bang.

  • Without a bang or a whimper, the Grand Bargain died this week.

  • He turned kind of white around the gills when he first felt the halter around his neck, and then braced up and not a whimper.

  • By this time the bent figure sitting in the rocking-chair, near the coffin began to show signs of life and whimper a little.

  • The whimper grew to a cry which Bud's rude rocking back and forth on the box before the fireplace could not still.

  • Just look at those poor boys there—some of them are dying, almost, but they won't whimper.

  • In the ominous silence the dog began to whimper in his sleep and his hind legs kicked convulsively.