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发表于 2009-11-6 18:31:23
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maunder
\MON-duhr\ , intransitive verb;
1.To talk incoherently; to speak in a rambling manner.
2.To wander aimlessly or confusedly.
不及物动词 vi.
1.唠叨地讲;胡扯
2.徘徊
Quotes:
As in one of his earlier novels , . . . Kerr invents a credibly grim scenario for our future: most of the earth's inhabitants are infected with a deadly virus and maunder in fetid cities.
~Charles Flowers, "Blood on the Moon (Really!)", New York Times, February 14, 1999
It is a play with melodramatic themes, but García Lorca has put aside temptation to let it maunder, scream or otherwise let the emotions take over.
~Richard F. Shepard, "Stage: 'Bernarda Alba' Produced in Spanish", New York Times, November 23, 1979
Now I find myself maundering about parts of plays hardly anybody knows or cares about anymore, such as the graveyard scene in Our Town, or the poker game in Tennessee Williams's A Streetcar Named Desire, or what Willy Loman's wife said after that tragically ordinary clumsily gallant American committed suicide in Arthur Miller's Death of a Salesman.
~Kurth Vonnegut, Timequake
Origin:
Maunder is perhaps a dialectal variant of meander (possibly influenced by wander). |
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