disturbing

英[dɪ'stɜːbɪŋ] 美[dɪ'stɜːrbɪŋ]
  • adj. 烦扰的;担心的;令人不安的
使用频率:
Adjective:
  1. causing distress or worry or anxiety;

    "distressing (or disturbing) news"
    "lived in heroic if something distressful isolation"
    "a disturbing amount of crime"
    "a revelation that was most perturbing"
    "a new and troubling thought"
    "in a particularly worrisome predicament"
    "a worrying situation"
    "a worrying time"

1. Guy Powell, defending, told magistrates: "It's a sad and disturbing case."
盖伊·鲍威尔在进行辩护时对地方法官说道:“这是一件非常不幸、令人不安的案子。”

来自柯林斯例句

2. There was something sinister about him that she found disturbing.
他身上有种邪恶的东西让她很不安。

来自柯林斯例句

3. Too often children are witness to a disturbing amount of violence.
孩子们经常会目睹暴力事件,其数量之多令人不安。

来自柯林斯例句

4. There are disturbing reports of killings at the two centres.
对这两个中心发生的谋杀的报道令人不安。

来自柯林斯例句

5. There was something about him she found disturbing.
他身上有某种东西使她不安。

来自柯林斯例句

    用作形容词 (adj.)
    1. We do not tell each other what is disturbing us.
      我们不告诉彼此什么是烦扰的我们。
    2. The disturbing news made us sad.
      这个令人烦扰的消息让我们很难过。
    3. He had a novel and disturbing experience last year.
      去年他有一次新奇而又令人不安的经历。
    4. Magritte's art persistently questioned, with a kind of disturbing humor, the conventions of painting.
      马格里特的艺术总是用一种令人不安的幽默对绘画的常规提出挑战。