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单词 deadly
释义 dead·ly
I. \ˈdedlē, -li\ adjective
(-er/-est)
Etymology: Middle English deedlich, deedly, from Old English dēadlīc, from dēad dead + -līc -ly — more at dead
1. obsolete
 a. : subject to death
 b. : being in danger of dying : likely to die
 c. : inanimate
2. : tending to produce death : productive of death
 < among the Indians, measles, scarlatina, and whooping cough were as deadly as typhus or cholera — Willa Cather >
3.
 a. : aiming to kill or destroy or involving such an aim
  < two brave vessels matched in deadly fight — William Wordsworth >
  : lacking possibility of an amicable solution : implacable
  < a deadly quarrel >
 b. : tending to enervate, vitiate, or smother all force, vitality, influence, or activity
  < the neglect of form … was even deadlier to poetry — Peter Viereck >
  : extremely pernicious
  < the deadly effects of malicious gossip >
  : penetrating, devastating
  < containing some deadly exposure of human folly or frailty — Daniel George >
4. : characteristic or suggestive of death or the dead
 < a deadly paleness spread over her features >
5. : marked by great precision : unerring
 < stories hurled with deadly aim — Green Peyton >
6. : marked by extreme seriousness and single-minded determination
 < goes in for careermanship in an impassive, deadly sort of way — James Kelly >
: notably effective : unfailing
 < the deadly efficiency of the famed police force >
: marked by complete lack of trifling or flippancy
 < he spoke with deadly seriousness >
7. : very great : complete, extreme
 < a deadly silence >
 < a deadly bore >
 < deadly fear >
Synonyms:
 mortal, lethal, fatal, deathly: deadly applies to anything bound or likely to cause death
  < so poisonous that the drinking of it is deadly to all but serpents and hippopotami — Llewelyn Powys >
  < Hands and his companion locked together in deadly wrestle, each with a hand upon the other's throat — R.L.Stevenson >
  In this sense mortal differs from deadly only in that it may occur somewhat more frequently in retrospect, in reference to situations in which death has occurred
  < till that young life being smitten in midheaven with mortal cold passed from her — Alfred Tennyson >
  lethal, the strongest word, indicates that which by its quality or quantity is designed especially to make death certain
  < the morphia he gave was a full lethal dose, and presently the body on the deck found peace — Nevil Shute >
  fatal comes between deadly and lethal in inevitability and may refer to other calamities than death
  < regarding strychnine, toxicology gives us a very wide range as to lethal dosage, depending on the condition and age of the patient. The average fatal dose for an adult is, I should say, two grains, though death has resulted from administrations of one grain — W.H.Wright >
  < the fatal policy by which the Empire invited its doom while striving to avert it, the policy of matching barbarian against barbarian — J.R.Green >
  deathly, once a synonym for deadly, is now commonly an intensive meaning “as of death” or “resembling death”
  < she had a deathly fear of Quintal and with reason — C.B.Nordhoff & J.N.Hall >
II. adverb
Etymology: Middle English deedliche, deedly, from Old English dēadlice, from dēadlīc, adjective
1. archaic : in a manner to occasion death : mortally : to death
 < the groanings of a deadly wounded man — Ezek 30:24 (Authorized Version) >
2. : in an implacable manner : to the death
3. : in a manner or degree produced by or as if produced by death
 < turned deadly pale >
4. : in a dead manner : as if dead : lifelessly
5. : extremely, excessively
 < deadly dull >
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更新时间:2024/12/23 20:30:52