外部链接:    leo英德   dict有道 百度搜索百度 google谷歌 google图片 wiki维基 百度百科百科   

 brash [bræʃ]   添加此单词到默认生词本
a. 性急的, 仓促的, 无礼的, 傲慢的

n. 胃灼热, 骤雨, 碎石堆

[医] 胃灼热


  1. He was wearing a rather brash tie.
    他系著一条颇为显眼的领带.
  2. His brash answers annoyed the interviewers.
    他回答问题自以为是, 面试的人感到很不痛快.
  3. His brash answers annoyed the interviewers.
    他回答问题自以为是,面试的人感到很不痛快.


brash
[ adj ]
offensively bold
<adj.all>
a brash newcomer disputed the age-old rules for admission to the cluba nervy thing to say


Brash \Brash\ (br[a^]sh), a. [Cf. Gael. bras or G. barsch harsh,
sharp, tart, impetuous, D. barsch, Sw. & Dan. barsk.]
Hasty in temper; impetuous. --Grose.


Brash \Brash\, a. [Cf. Amer. bresk, brusk, fragile, brittle.]
Brittle, as wood or vegetables. [Colloq., U. S.] --Bartlett.


Brash \Brash\, n. [See {Brash} brittle.]
1. A rash or eruption; a sudden or transient fit of sickness.

2. Refuse boughs of trees; also, the clippings of hedges.
[Prov. Eng.] --Wright.

3. (Geol.) Broken and angular fragments of rocks underlying
alluvial deposits. --Lyell.

4. Broken fragments of ice. --Kane.

{Water brash} (Med.), an affection characterized by a
spasmodic pain or hot sensation in the stomach with a
rising of watery liquid into the mouth; pyrosis.

{Weaning brash} (Med.), a severe form of diarrhea which
sometimes attacks children just weaned.

  1. "We want to make editorial changes that drive the product upscale," said Larry Burke, whose brash entrepreneurship pushed the magazine through various formats since 1976.
  2. Actress Monica Vitti is being peppered with offers to bring her hilarious performance as a brash reporter in Ben Hecht's "The Front Page" back to the United States.
  3. The brash, brassy music is Styne's best theater score.
  4. In a brash, whirlwind performance, Mr. Walsh, 49 years old, had used the AAR pulpit successfully to lobby Congress for a more than $1 billion reduction in rail labor costs through changes in work rules.
  5. The brash outsider was hired five years ago to help transform a plodding bureacracy into a force able to compete in unregulated markets following the breakup of the Bell System.
  6. He ran as an unabashed liberal, but his was not a campaign brimming with position papers and brash promises.
  7. He was president of what is now Fox Inc.'s film and TV unit from 1984-86 until he left with heart problems after tumultuous relations with Mr. Diller, whose tastes and style are less brash than Mr. Gordon's.
  8. He's brash and egocentric, a womanizer who thinks nothing of having his mistress attend a formal dinner party at the governor's mansion.
  9. Some East Germans see Western visitors as brash, rude people who like to show off their wealth, and view themselves as humbler folk not consumed by greed.
  10. He came to his present job in a characteristically brash way, associates say.
  11. They have made millions from their brash mega-deals.
  12. "Within six years," the brash computer whiz-kid promises, "the Li Peng regime will fall."
  13. His Stanley is brash rather than brutish, more wise guy than tough guy.
  14. Lafontaine is known for making bold and brash political statments and delighted in his role as a political gadfly.
  15. "He is most innovative, very aggressive, very brash and a very clever man."
  16. Decca's recording is brash and James Levine conducts with relentless passion, loving the music to death. It is interesting to speculate which recordings from today will be accorded historic importance in the next century.
  17. In fact, the Broadway debut of one of rock's biggest stars is not the reason to see playwright David Mamet's brash, biting and lewdly funny look at the film industry.
  18. At Drexel, the brash Mr. Cohen was known as a hard bargainer in Drexel's settlements with state regulators to keep the firm open for business.
  19. The brash skier, who was training for a World Cup ski jumping event being held Wednesday, lost control of his right ski in midleap and tumbled several times on landing, the Austria Press Agency reported.
  20. So often operettas in the care of English National Opera have succumbed to what one might call the London Coliseum treatment: play it big, play it brash, play it vulgar.
  21. The brash, arrogant entrepreneur has masterfully hyped today's event by granting exclusive peeks at the new machine to certain national publications, on condition they not publish what they know until tomorrow.
  22. As a brash, eye-catching incentive to purchase, it is unsurpassed.
  23. It was the brash, individualistic ethos of the 'bubble era' which threatened traditional values.
  24. The bebop he championed may have been brash, but Gordon wasn't.
  25. After an official visit to California last March, even the serious newspapers said Sarah and Andrew's behavior had been brash and vulgar, particularly her bold repartee with audiences.
  26. It became known for lending liberally to small businesses, for its services such as cash management, and for its brash, young officers.
  27. The media also criticized what they saw as the duchess' brash and vulgar behavior during the couple's March U.S. tour, particularly in Los Angeles.
  28. But Skinner is a Washington newcomer, notwithstanding his brash statement on arrival here that "I'm not going to take a back seat." Mrs. Dole, in contrast, formerly was secretary of transportation during the Reagan administration.
  29. The company's brash confidence is reflected right down to the bold red letters on its envelopes proclaiming: "We will win the supercomputer race."
  30. Florida Republicans, with a good shot at gaining a U.S. Senate seat two years after losing one, will be choosing between the arch-conservative grandson of a baseball legend and the brash prosecutor who put a Colombian drug lord behind bars.
加入收藏 本地收藏 百度搜藏 QQ书签 美味书签 Google书签 Mister Wong
您正在访问的是
中国词汇量第二的英语词典
更多精彩,登录后发现......
验证码看不清,请点击刷新
  注册