| 单词 | fuzzy |
| 释义 | fuzzy From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishfuzzyfuzz‧y /ˈfʌzi/ adjective1 CLEAR/EASY TO SEEif a sound or picture is fuzzy, it is unclear → blurredSome of the photos were so fuzzy it was hard to tell who was who.2 CLEAR/EASY TO SEEunclear or confused OPP clearThere’s a fuzzy line between parents’ and schools’ responsibilities.3 HBAHBHcovered with soft short hair or furI stroked the kitten’s fuzzy back.4 fuzzy hair is very curly and sticks straight up —fuzzily adverb —fuzziness noun [uncountable]Examples from the Corpusfuzzy• This matters most in fuzzy, creative processes such as product development.• a fuzzy hat• Its bare patches glimmered in the fuzzy light.• Clarence had only a few fuzzy memories of his grandparents.• Nectarines are a smooth skinned variety of the fuzzy peach, and are usually a deeper, red-orange colour.• The wing, I found, had inadequate focus and a fuzzy sense of purpose.• a fuzzy snapshot• Police have only a fuzzy videotape of the bank robbery.Origin fuzzy (1600-1700) Perhaps from Low German fussig “loose” |
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