TOO/TOO MUCHfar more than you would reasonably or normally expect 超出合理限度的,过分的SYN excessive
Testing is taking up an inordinate amount of teachers’ time.
测验占去了教师们太多的时间。
—inordinatelyadverbadv
She’s inordinately fond of her parrot.
她溺爱她那只鹦鹉。
Examples from the Corpus
inordinate• a man of inordinateambition• Scientists have been criticized for devoting an inordinate amount of time to research on animals.• an inordinate number of meetings
inordinate amount• Either keeping personalcreditorsaccounts or making sundry creditors adjustments can consumeinordinate amounts of administrative and accounting time.• In the Sovietcontext an inordinate amount of attention has been paid to the willed aims of Bolshevikleaders.• That is why the social anthropologists are justified in devoting such an inordinate amount of attention to the field of kinship.• But the Minnesota Timberwolves, who own the fifthpick, have shown an inordinate amount of interest in Nash.• But in reality, seat-side service is only feasible for those with teenyappetites and an inordinate amount of patience.• They devote an inordinate amount of time, effort and resource to developing high-calibre managers.• We found ourselves spending an inordinate amount of time in the chariot, chasing hither and yon.• We were spending an inordinate amount of time sending people to different meetings and not knowing what was going on.
Origininordinate
(1300-1400)Latininordinatus, from ordinare“to arrange”