great big• My mouth watered as I looked at those great bigberries.• And great bigchunks of the currentLibertarian Party movement contain a horde of formerleft-wing nuts who are now Libertarian nuts.• A great bigeel, one day, swam past and touched her.• In the silence that followed, Baby Suggs, holy, offered up to them her great bigheart.• It was that little noise and a great bighug that let me know that you were very proud of me.• I like the man who's playing this great bigshiny thing like a foghorn.• I mean, look at what Hendrix had for pedals - just a Fuzz Face and a great bigstack of Marshalls.• Well now, one surely would have thought that for such little things those great big waves might have seemed threatening.
8doing STH a lot 某事做得很多 used to emphasize that someone does something a lot 酷爱做某事的〔用于强调〕
a great talker/reader/admirer etc
Anthony’s a great talker – sometimes you just can’t get a word in.
安东尼很健谈——有时你根本插不上话。
Len was a great believer in the power of positive thinking.
莱恩坚信积极思维的力量。
be a great one for doing something
She’s a great one for telling stories about her schooldays.
她很喜欢讲她学生时代的故事。
9to a greater or lesser extentused to emphasize that something is always true, even though it is more true or noticeable in some situations than others 或多或少,多多少少
Most companies operate in conditions that are to a greater or lesser extent competitive.
10be no great shakesinformalBAD AT to not be very good, interesting, or skilful 不是很好,不怎么样
The work’s no great shakes, but at least I’m earning.
这工作不怎么样,但至少我在挣钱。
Examples from the Corpus
be no great shakes• The food we got there was no great shakes.• Secondly, and crucially, Professor Griff is no great shakes as a rapper.• At school I was no great shakes at it, or anything.
11be going great gunsinformalSUCCESSFUL to be doing something extremely well 很成功,很顺利
After a slow start, the Tigers are going great guns.
12bad 不好的 spoken informal used when you are disappointed or annoyed about something 太糟了〔表示失望或生气〕
‘Daniel’s cancelled the party.’ ‘Oh great!’
“丹尼尔把派对取消了。”“噢,太糟了!”
13animal/bird/plant etc 兽类/鸟类/植物等 used in the names of some animals or plants, especially when they are bigger than other animals or plants of the same type 大〔用于相似动植物中较大者的名称前〕
He had a taste for adventure and the great outdoors.
他喜欢冒险,喜欢大自然。
Examples from the Corpus
the great outdoors• But these two weren't dressing up for the great outdoors.• In fact, anything can happen in the great outdoors.• Save it for the garden or the great outdoors.• Try to be as tolerant with the views of other humanbeings as you are with the great outdoors.• Other sights: If you growbored with the great outdoors or just want to warm up, you have many options.• While some people have a naturalaptitude for living in the great outdoors, success usually has little to do with intelligence.• In the great outdoors, the merit of any feats become meaningless.
15.great minds (think alike)spoken used humorously when you and another person have had the same idea 英雄所见(略同)〔幽默用法,表示和另一个人有同样的想法〕
16the greater gooda generaladvantage that you can only gain by losing or harming something that is considered less important 〔需要牺牲较不重要的东西才能得到的〕更大的利益
Some wars are fought for the greater good.
有时候战争是为了获取更大的利益。
Examples from the Corpus
the greater good• This, I learned, was standardpractice when a customer was about to be sacrificed for the greater good of Salomon.• For the greater good of the parish or because he knew something?
Alone of the great apes, the gorilla is not very efficient at using tools.
类人猿中,唯独大猩猩不太会使用工具。
Examples from the Corpus
the great apes• The orang is by far the most arboreal of the great apes.• Scientists are divided about which of the great apesevolved first from the Proconsul line.
18the great dividea situation in which there is a bigdifference between groups in society, areas of a country etc, for example a big difference between their wealth or attitudes 分水岭,差距,差异〔指不同社会群体、地区等在财富和价值观上的差别〕
The great divide between north and south seems to be as unbridgeable as ever.
巨大的南北差距似乎依然难以弥合。
Examples from the Corpus
the great divide• A handful of people fell between the cracks of the Great Divide.• She is still on the human side of the Great Divide.• These guys are only Caspers; the realmonsters are still breathing on this side of the great divide.• Thus was bornthe Great Divide.• The SupportForce crossed the great divide and for that the profession ought to be grateful.
19.Greater London/Los Angeles/Manchester etcSGLondon, Los Angeles etc and its outer areas 大伦敦/大洛杉矶/大曼彻斯特等〔指包括市区和周围地区在内的区域〕
Examples from the Corpus
Greater London/Los Angeles/Manchester etc• Every year a couple hundred thousand migrants from Greater Los Angeles are absorbed by other Californiacounties.• In Greater Los Angeles area there are 7.5 million registereddrivers and 8 million cars.
20.huge/enormous greatBritish EnglishBrE spokenBIG used to emphasize how big something is 巨大的,庞大的
21.great Scott!/great Heavens!spoken old-fashioned used to expressshock or surprise 天哪!〔表示震惊或惊讶〕
22.great with childliterary very soon to have a baby 怀孕的,有身孕的
Examples from the Corpus
great with child• But my wife is great with child!
—greatness noun [uncountableU]
She was destined for greatness.
她注定不平凡。
Examples from the Corpus
great• ""Did you have a good holiday?'' ""It was great!''• an excellentfilm• Maria del Carmen Asencio, a greatactivist and a good friend of mine, was among them.• Olivier was a greatactor.• It would be of greatassistance if customers could have the exact money ready.• I have greatdifficulty in reading without my glasses.• It is actively looking for more pilotschemes to identify the greaterefficiencies needed and the best optionsavailable for wastecollection.• He had squandered his greatgifts of talent, intellect, and personalmagnetism.• As far as the eye could see, there stretched a greatherd of buffalo.• "Your car won't be ready until next week." "Oh, great! I need it tomorrow."• "Let's have a barbecue, " "That's a great idea."• It'd be great if you could come.• That is a matter of greatimportance.• The point is, we get great information all the time about what is good and bad for us.• Ella Fitzgerald was the greatestjazzsinger ever.• a greatlady• I was never really a great one for sport as a child.• Other sights: If you grow bored with the greatoutdoors or just want to warm up, you have many options.• The greatestpleasure comes when caddie and player are in perfect synchronization.• Like greatsailingships, the cloudssped across the sky.• Here he had much greaterscope than in London's country.• McEnroe was possibly the greatesttennis player of all time.• I feel great this morning!• "You want to go to a movie instead?" "Yeah, great, why not!"• Many of our great works of art are being sold and exported.
the great thing about somebody/something• That was one of the great things about both the Lisa and the Macintosh.• D.S. One of the great things aboutdrama school is what you learn to reject as much as what you actually learn.• And the great thing aboutGrandfather, apparently, was that he was interested in everyone.• That's the great thing about having a car.• I think the greatest thing about it was the talent that came out to support it.• And that's the great thing about it.• One of the great things aboutsetting a text is that it widens the musicalvocabulary greatly.• One of the great things about these utilities is the frequency with which they're updated.
be a great one for doing something• Margaret used to be a great one for rote learning.• They say in his day he was a great one for the ladies.• Tyrone Guthrie was a great one for comic business, and it was amazing to see how Michael picked it all up.
great2 noun
1[countableC usually plural] a very successful and famous person in a particular sport, profession etc 〔某项运动、某一行业等的〕杰出人物
Jack Nicklaus is one of golf’s all-time greats.
杰克·尼克劳斯是空前杰出的高尔夫球手之一。
I think his show’s OK, but I wouldn’t call him one of the greats.
我觉得他的节目还可以,但他算不上是什么杰出人物。
► see thesaurus at star
2.the great and the goodpeople who are consideredimportant – used humorously 重要人物,大人物〔幽默用法〕
Examples from the Corpus
great• Fitzgerald is one of the all-time jazz greats.