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whit

/wit, hwit/US // wɪt, ʰwɪt //UK // (wɪt) //

白,白色,白色的,白的

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : a particle; bit; jot: not a whit better.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • If, after all these years, she possesses any whit of performance anxiety, it has to do only with living up to the legacy of those who showed her the way.

  • In 1997, Whit Stillman re-created Studio 54 in its ornate lobby for his film The Last Days of Disco.

  • Have you and Whit wanted to hook up again since The Last Days of Disco?

  • Two decades on from his masterpiece on anti-Americanism abroad, Whit Stillman remains obsessed with native-expat dynamics.

  • Even so, the comments were illuminating in that they show that Obama is of no frame of mind to change the current policy a whit.

  • The tone was set early when Republican pollster Whit Ayers declared that “we are in an epic struggle against secular socialism.”

  • The rapid spread of the revolt was not a whit less marvelous than its lack of method or cohesion.

  • Was the second Charles one whit more desirable than the first of that ilk?

  • The tower in the Grand Place is very fine, and the bricks of which it is built do not yield a whit in color to the best stone.

  • His flow of speech is incessant; he seems not a whit disconcerted by my evident disinclination to talk.

  • Isabel's theory of life—for women of her make—had not altered a whit, but the beckoning finger had lost its vigor.