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 nasty ['nɑ:sti]   添加此单词到默认生词本
a. 污秽的, 下流的, 险恶的



    nasty
    nastier, nastiest
    [ adj ]
    1. offensive or even (of persons) malicious

    2. <adj.all>
      in a nasty mood
      a nasty accident
      a nasty shock
      a nasty smell
      a nasty trick to pull
      Will he say nasty things at my funeral?
    3. exasperatingly difficult to handle or circumvent

    4. <adj.all>
      a nasty problem
      a good man to have on your side in a tight situation
    5. characterized by obscenity

    6. <adj.all>
      had a filthy mouth
      foul language
      smutty jokes
    7. disgustingly dirty; filled or smeared with offensive matter

    8. <adj.all>
      as filthy as a pigsty
      a foul pond
      a nasty pigsty of a room


    Nasty \Nas"ty\ (n[.a]s"t[y^]), a. [Compar. {Nastier}
    (n[.a]s"t[i^]*[~e]r); superl. {Nastiest}.] [For older nasky;
    cf. dial. Sw. naskug, nasket.]
    1. Offensively filthy; very dirty, foul, or defiled;
    disgusting; nauseous.

    2. Hence, loosely: Offensive; disagreeable; unpropitious;
    wet; drizzling; as, a nasty rain, day, sky.

    3. Characterized by obscenity; indecent; indelicate; gross;
    filthy.

    4. Vicious; offensively ill-tempered; insultingly mean;
    spiteful; as, a nasty disposition.
    [PJC]

    5. Difficult to deal with; troublesome; as, he fell of his
    bike and got a nasty bruise on his knee. [slang]
    [PJC]

    Syn: {Nasty}, {Filthy}, {Foul}, {Dirty}.

    Usage: Anything nasty is usually wet or damp as well as
    filthy or dirty, and disgusts by its stickiness or
    odor; but filthy and foul imply that a thing is filled
    or covered with offensive matter, while dirty
    describes it as defiled or sullied with dirt of any
    kind; as, filthy clothing, foul vapors, etc.

    1. By the early '50s, some comic books were seriously nasty.
    2. "The third quarter was nasty.
    3. Democrat Michael Dukakis and Republican George Bush made half-hour network appeals for votes Monday night, the final chapter in a long, often nasty television war that played a key campaign role.
    4. "I want to see Michael Jackson as me," he said. "There was talk that Eddie Murphy would do it, but I think he would talk too nasty, say things that don't need to be said.
    5. Instead of integrating into the new united Europe, Yugoslavia is sliding back into the continent's dark divided past, when Serbs and Croats fought their own nasty war within World War II.
    6. But in the late 1970s, Uncle Sam got nasty, demanding information previously held secret and insisting on limits on who could form tax-haven companies here, Mr. Mathavious says.
    7. A show by the rap group 2 Live Crew wasn't as nasty _ or as long _ as the audience wanted.
    8. A nasty clatter after the piece ended could have been Le Spectre de Michel Fokine expressing an opinion on this ludicrous staging. What Fokine might have said about the programme's finale, Scheherazade, does not bear contemplation.
    9. The absence of losses and restructuring costs alone should be sufficient to boost group profits significantly this year, providing there are no other nasty surprises.
    10. Here is no mountain of unburied garbage, no nasty smells and not much dust.
    11. The prospective p/e of 18.5 is relatively pricey but Sema offers stability and growth in a sector notorious for nasty surprises.
    12. "I can say a lot of nasty things, but I won't," a teary-eyed Connie Arvidson said after the sentence.
    13. Neither country wants a nasty squabble over the military pecking order to spoil the games.
    14. It really is nasty.
    15. The presence of fisherman and fighting man along this coveted stretch of water is spawning a nasty little war here in the northern woods of Michigan's Lower Peninsula.
    16. His team may not surprise opponents, but a tight defence and a smothering midfield means that he is not going to get any nasty shocks, either.
    17. O'Neill indicated he was glad he wasn't running again, recalling that one of the reasons he decided against seeking re-election was that he was afraid the campaign would get nasty.
    18. There's not a trace of that nasty calling card of the cokehead, those facial lines that even the best makeup can't disguse.
    19. Or a nasty little firefight over selection of a new party chairman four years ago that weakened Walter F. Mondale almost on the eve of his nomination.
    20. 'The Fed has provided a seismic shock to markets and you have to be concerned that world markets are about to hit an air pocket; it could be very nasty short-term,' he said.
    21. And for once the company does not have to apologise for any nasty surprises.
    22. "We have penciled in 1989 as the year of a pretty nasty world recession."
    23. A nasty court dispute over a corporate jet and royalties on pies could have an impact on the future control of Ramada Inc.
    24. "The way this is going this could lead to something very nasty," said a diplomat from Benin.
    25. It's pretty nasty down there.
    26. There also have been suggestions that Bush should meet with defeated candidate Michael Dukakis to try to repair the wounds of a nasty campaign.
    27. Pauline Payne raised him as best she could in the nasty North Philadelphia neighborhood.
    28. I was becoming disillusioned about Philip Larkin after all the recent nasty revelations, but if his poetry infuriates Professor Terry Eagleton he cannot be all bad.
    29. The market began on sound footing, largely on Wednesday's healthy performance on Wall Street and relief after Wednesday's economic statement by Chancellor of the Exchequer John Major which contained no nasty surprises for the market.
    30. In most "nasty times," stocks erode for months rather than crash.
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