fantastic
fantastic 英 [fænˈtæstɪk] 美 [fænˈtæstɪk]
adj. 了不起的;荒诞的
- The adjective fantastic has two meanings — extraordinarily brilliant or ludicrously far-fetched. So when your boss calls your suggestion of work-at-home-in-your-bathrobe-Fridays for the whole office fantastic, be sure you know which one he means.
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- adj. 了不起的;荒诞的
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1. a fantastic beach in Australia
澳大利亚一个极棒的海滩
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2. a fantastic achievement
了不起的成就
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3. You've got the job? Fantastic!
你得到那工作了?太好了!
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4. The response to our appeal was fantastic.
我们的呼吁引起十分强烈的反应。
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5. The car costs a fantastic amount of money.
这轿车的价钱贵得吓人。
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6. a fantastic scheme, a fantastic project
不切实际的计划╱方案
- fantastic (adj.) late 14c., "existing only in imagination," from Middle French fantastique (14c.), from Medieval Latin fantasticus, from Late Latin phantasticus "imaginary," from Greek phantastikos "able to imagine," from phantazein "make visible" (middle voice phantazesthai "picture to oneself"); see phantasm. Trivial sense of "wonderful, marvelous" recorded by 1938. Old French had a different adjective form, fantasieus "weird; insane; make-believe." Medieval Latin also used fantasticus as a noun, "a lunatic," and Shakespeare and his contemporaries had it in Italian form fantastico "one who acts ridiculously."
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