florid
florid 英 [ˈflɒrɪd] 美 [ˈflɔrɪd]
adj. 绚丽的;气色好的
- Something that's elaborate and full of extra flourishes is florid, whether it's your relatives' ornate decorating style or the way they talk, using a lot of unnecessarily long, complicated words.
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- adj. 绚丽的;气色好的
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1. So we've got the root here of the--and then the trunk and then up above, this florid canopy would musically be the what?
我们来看看这里的根,然后是树干再往上,样华丽的树冠在音乐上被称为什么呢?
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2. The world is urgent with bursting life, with the wild exciting beauty of youth, but it is an impetuous beauty of the senses racing impatiently into the florid and surfeited luxury of summer.
春天的世界里满是焦燥爆长的生命,满是年轻疯狂的美丽,然而这是一种感官的轻薄的美丽,随即便浮夸地堕入华丽奢侈、狂喝滥饮的夏天。
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3. In her face were too sharply blended the delicate features of her mother, a Coast aristocrat of French de¬scent, and the heavy ones of her florid Irish father.
因为她母亲是个法兰西血统的海滨贵族。 父亲是个皮色深浓的爱尔兰人,所以遗传给她的质地难免不调和。
- florid (adj.) 1640s, "strikingly beautiful," from French floride "flourishing," from Latin floridus "flowery, in bloom," from flos "flower" (from PIE root *bhel- (3) "to thrive, bloom"). Sense of "ruddy" is first recorded 1640s. Meaning "highly decorated, profusely adorned (as with flowers)" is from 1650s. Related: Floridly.
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