The group of barbaric soldiers killed many people. 那群野蛮的士兵杀了很多人。
The football march had to be paused because of the barbaric supporters. 因为那些野蛮的助威者,足球比赛不得不暂停。
The group of barbaric soldiers killed many people. 那群野蛮的士兵杀了很多人。
barbaric
[ adj ]
without civilizing influences
<adj.all> barbarian invaders barbaric practices a savage people fighting is crude and uncivilized especially if the weapons are efficient wild tribes
unrestrained and crudely rich
<adj.all> barbaric use of color or ornament
Barbaric \Bar*bar"ic\ (b[aum]r*b[a^]r"[i^]k), a. [L. barbaricus foreign, barbaric, Gr. barbariko`s.] 1. Of, or from, barbarian nations; foreign; -- often with reference to barbarous nations of east. ``Barbaric pearl and gold.'' --Milton.
2. Of or pertaining to, or resembling, an uncivilized person or people; barbarous; barbarian; destitute of refinement. ``Wild, barbaric music.'' --Sir W. Scott.
In West Germany, Chancellor Helmut Kohl angrily denounced the "barbaric use of force," and Labor Minister Norbert Bluem said a special session of the United Nations should be convened on the assault.
"The decision made by the police officer on duty to place so many prisoners in a small cell was barbaric," Vasconcellos told The Associated Press.
Britain yesterday condemned the killing of three western hostages, executed by their Khmer Rouge captors, as a barbaric outrage and said it would press Cambodia to bring those responsible to justice.
Mrs. Marcos said in a statement. "This is a great shame." Marcos' attorney Richard Hibey called the serving of the summons "barbaric."
Was this barbaric visual necessary? On Jan. 15, Tom Brokaw on NBC-TV interviewed wives of Navy pilots in the Gulf.
Court chairman K.F. Otu-Essel called the killing barbaric and said such practices must end.
"How many more horses will be senselessly destroyed before the citizens of Calgary put an end to their stupid, barbaric affair?" wrote a typical critic, Richard M. Nichols of Elk Grove, Calif.
The civic association, some of whose members had supported the so-called "people's courts" during the 1984-86 nationwide political violence, said it was barbaric that inexperienced youths have been judging and meting out punishment to older citizens.
What I think I said before was hostage-taking punishes the innocent and separates families, back in September, it is barbaric, it will not work - Sept. 16th - and it will not affect my ability to make tough decisions.
Early on he knew instinctively that Germany had next-to-nil prospects of winning the war and thus viewed it as perversely barbaric.
"It's an absolutely barbaric act, consistent with the worst dimensions of terrorism," said Prime Minister Brian Mulroney of Canada said of the Higgins death claim.
In London, a Foreign Office spokesman called Croskery's slaying "a barbaric crime" and demanded Iraq punish those responsible.
But Le Pen denounced the desecration as "barbaric" and said it was likely a sham staged to disgrace him and his National Front, a party that has won 15 percent support in recent opinion polls.
The opposition newspaper La Prensa called the 16-year sentences "barbaric" and said lawyers for all four defendants planned to appeal.
But no more shelters is a barbaric thought." The Hollywood reference sprung from a made-for-TV movie that glossed over Snyder's abandonment of his family and zeroed in on his good deeds.
Peacock's father, David, who lives in Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher's hometown of Grantham in Lincolnshire, said: "It is barbaric that a lad out on peaceful patrol should be blown up like that.
"To let society hang children is medieval and barbaric." However, Kentucky Attorney General Fred Cowan said he found the decisions on juvenile killers gratifying.
In a cable, Hoss said: "Beirut and its surroundings witnessed a horrible night of barbaric random shelling.