bungle的意思和读音

bungle

: [ˈbʌŋɡ(ə)l] : ['bʌŋɡ(ə)l]

n.

v.

bungles  bungling  bungled  

v.+n.bungle job

v.succeed

v.botch,mismanage,bodge,ruin,make a mess of

bunglev.

1.[t][i]~ (sth)to do sth badly or without skill; to fail at sth

They bungled the job.

a bungled robbery/raid/attempt

n.

1.[ususing]something that is done badly and that causes problems

Their pay was late because of a computer bungle.

v.1.(),()2.;3.

n.1.,

v.1.to spoil something by doing it very badly

n.1.a situation that has been dealt with very badly

1. colossal bungle hypothesis ...

2. ;〖 hope;expect〗 ;bungle;cheat〗 〖 start;befrightened〗 ...

3. error n. , bungle v. , goof n. , ...

4. bog down 使…… bungle carve up ...

5. ... 2. fluff;tease 1. bungle;fluff 2. fluff … up ...

6. bumptious bungle buoyant ...

7. burglar ---- bungle ---- bugle ...

8. follow-up n. bungle vt. mess vt.

:,,,,,,,

1.The very traits that make Anne unique and enrich her inner life also cause her to act passionately and stubbornly and to bungle chores.使

2.I've got to exert myself more for I don't want to make a bungle of this book.

3.If it is found to be contradicted by observation--well these experimentalists do bungle things sometimes.——

4.My discomfort at having to make an offer put me to thinking that we often bungle our housing decisions.

5.Bungle, who took control of other avatars who were then made to describe violent, explicit acts on the screen.

6.All 900 million users around the world were advised they needed a patch because of a colossal security bungle .9亿IE

7.But bungle their initiation and the consequences can be dire.

8.The first two trials fell apart because of lengthy legal argument and a police bungle over secret documents.

9.That last stupid bungle of his is the end.使

10.The whole job was a gigantic bungle.