释义 |
am·bi·gu·i·ty \ˌambə̇ˈgyüəd.ē, ˌaam-, -ətē, -i\ noun (-es) Etymology: Middle English ambiguite, from Middle French ambiguïté, from Latin ambiguitat-, ambiguitas, from ambiguus + -itat-, -itas -ity 1. obsolete : intellectual uncertainty : doubt < resolve me of all ambiguities — Christopher Marlowe > 2. a. (1) : the condition of admitting of two or more meanings, of being understood in more than one way, or of referring to two or more things at the same time < their very ambiguity is one source of their use in defense of any measure — John Dewey > (2) : looseness of signification or reference < the technical writer must rigorously avoid all ambiguity — C.E.Kellogg > 2. b. (1) : uncertainty of meaning or significance or of position in relation to something or somebody else < a sufficiently detailed account … to remove all ambiguity — P.E.More > < the social ambiguity of his parents — Lionel Trilling > (2) : mystery or mysteriousness arising especially from a vague knowledge or understanding < there was an ambiguity about this young lady — Nathaniel Hawthorne > 3. : the intellectual or emotional interplay or tension resulting from the opposition or contraposing of apparently incompatible or contradictory elements or levels of meaning in a poem or other literary work; especially : the opposition or contraposition of two or more meanings inherent in one word or symbol or in a consistent set of metaphoric or symbolic words 4. : the maintaining of two or more logically incompatible beliefs or attitudes at the same time or alternately : inconsistency resulting from vacillation between two opposing views < the inner ambiguity in each of us between reason and coercion — T.V.Smith > 5. : an ambiguous word or expression < a poetical ambiguity depends on the reader's weighting the possible meanings according to their probability — William Empson > |