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wickedly

/wik-id/US // ˈwɪk ɪd //UK // (ˈwɪkɪd) //

邪恶地,恶毒地,邪恶的,恶毒的

Related Words

Definitions

adj.形容词 adjective
  1. 1

    wick·ed·er, wick·ed·est.

    • : evil or morally bad in principle or practice; sinful; iniquitous: wicked people;wicked habits.
    • : mischievous or playfully malicious: These wicked kittens upset everything.
    • : distressingly severe, as a storm, wound, or cold: a wicked winter.
    • : passing reasonable bounds; intolerably bad:wicked prices;a wicked exam.
    • : having a bad disposition; ill-natured; mean: a wicked horse.
    • : spiteful; malevolent; vicious: a wicked tongue.
    • : extremely troublesome or dangerous: wicked roads.
    • : unpleasant; foul: a wicked odor.
    • : Slang. wonderful; great; masterful; deeply satisfying: He blows a wicked trumpet.
adv.副词 adverb
  1. 1
    • : Slang. very; really; totally: That shirt is wicked cool.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • There are wicked reminders, for instance, of her acid humor.

  • Revisiting historical debates about the Fairness Doctrine can help us think through these wicked problems.

  • The player then traverses a gorgeously-rendered landscape and solves a series of wicked little puzzles in a heart-wrenching reunification quest.

  • In fact, if you go back even further, a pollster named Elmo Roper found that 47 percent of Americans found sexual relations for young people before marriage to be “wicked” back in 1939.

  • Both tell the stories of doomed criminals trying to make their way in a wicked world.

  • He once experimented with dressing as “Hilda the Wicked Witch” as a way to expand his business to Halloween.

  • “Wicked William,” as he was known, made short work of her fortune.

  • MacDonald saw a lot that day, including gold candlesticks, the Kingdom of Heaven, and lots of violent judgment for the wicked.

  • The film lets her unspoiled beauty speak the so-called “wicked” truth: for Ellen, abortion was the best choice.

  • The original trailer even opens with her confession and defense of the abortion: “Sometimes the truth is wicked.”

  • It is then we make him our friend, which sets us above the envy and contempt of wicked men.

  • The bear watched him narrowly with its wicked little eyes, though it did not see fit to cease its paw-licking.

  • O wicked presumption, whence camest thou to cover the earth with thy malice, and deceitfulness?

  • No sooner was the ceremony over than the wicked count ordered her to present herself at the castle.

  • I ushered you into this wicked world, young man, and a nice use you seem to have made of your time.

wickedly - EE Dictionary | EE Dictionary