not quite• "Are you ready?" "Not quite."• The orbits of the planets are almost circular, but not quite.• We haven't quite finished yet.• Figures are fabulous Well ... not quite.• "Is he 60?" "Not quite!"• He didn't say it quite that way, but that's what he meant.• She hasn't quite finished her homework yet.• Later, they were not quite able to fathom this themselves; they sifted through the facts with gravepurpose.• The weather was not quite as nice as on our two previoustrips, but it kept dry.• That's a good answer but it's not quitecorrect.• The paint's not quite dry yet.• Give me five minutes - I'm not quite ready.• It's not quitered, it's more like a marooncolor.• Not quite right, not quite plain enough or narrow enough, but getting there.• Three other wanderers, not quite so dazed, allowed Billy to tag along.• I'm not quitesure how the system works.• Indirectly, perhaps, but not quite that openly.• It was not quite the end of the world as we know it, but it was close.• But that's not quite the point.• It's not quite time to go yet.
6not quite why/what/where etcEXACTnot exactly why, what, where etc 不完全是因为/是…那样/是某地等
The play wasn’t quite what we expected.
该剧不像我们想的那么好。
Examples from the Corpus
not quite why/what/where etc• The whole situation was very unusual and not quite what I expected it to be.• They are not quite what I should have expected from a man like Serafin.• But it is not quite what it seems.• So Feuerbach's sensuousanthropology, much praised even by Karl Barth, is not quite what it seems.• Only his shoes seemed to be a little too pointed - not quite what men one knew would wear.• Somehow we get the feeling this is not quite what Tucson MayorGeorgeMiller had in mind.• This is not quite what was expected.• That is not quite what we suggested, which was that it should have regard to affordability.
7quite a something/quite some somethingBritish EnglishBrEUNUSUAL used before a noun to emphasize that something is very good, large, interesting etc 不寻常的;出众的;相当不错的〔用于名词前作强调〕
That was quite a party you had.
你的聚会搞得非常不错。
The engines make quite a noise.
引擎的声音很大。
It’s quite some distance away.
那儿相当远。
Examples from the Corpus
quite a something/quite some something• In this kind of organization a directivestyle would be seen as quite out-of-place.• Let us start from an observation which may seem quite unconnected.• The breedingrange of islandspecies is small and therefore vulnerable, and the species themselves may be quite primitive.• The poll shows that Mr Livingstone's cross-party popularity is quite unprecedented.• The problem begins when we realize that some companies are actually quite genuine.• But some are quite skeptical of some of his initiatives.• Dorothy and I love the city, although our children have quite honestly had some problems.• Vassar was just becoming co-ed and there was a lot of tension and, quite frankly, someweird men.
8quite a/some timeespecially British EnglishBrE a fairly long time 相当长的时间
We’ve been waiting for quite some time now.
我们已经等了相当长的时间。
Examples from the Corpus
quite a/some time• He found out we had been pulling the wool over his eyes for quite some time.• If the skin and gills are kept moist they can remain out of water for quite some time.• It must have taken quite a time.• It was brought to her before I really got to know her, but it was with her for quite some time.• Uh I have no for quite some time.• Judging the competition has taken quite some time and was no easymatter.• In other words, it Adll be quite some time before the kinks are worked out of the system.• For quite some time he lived with the expectation that he was going to die.
9quite rightBritish EnglishBrEAGREE used to show that you agree strongly with someone 完全正确
‘I refuse to do any more work.’ ‘Quite right. They can’t expect you to work for nothing.’
“我拒绝再做任何事情了。”“说得对。他们不能让你无偿工作。”
Examples from the Corpus
quite right• But this is not quite right.• He was even happy to agree when Louise suggested that the buttons on the jacket were not quite right.• Now that is very wrong, and yet, somehow, quite right.• They'd shared a bed in Cumberland and she had comforted Gordon because nothing was quite right.• If he thinks something isn't quite right he tells me.• Not quite right, not quite plain enough or narrow enough, but getting there.• It is quite right that members sensitivities should be aired.• Distractedvicars want action against the furry little pests, and quite right too.
10that’s quite all rightBritish EnglishBrEYES used to reply to someone that you are not angry about something they have done 没有关系
‘I’m sorry we’re so late.’ ‘That’s quite all right.’
“很抱歉我们来得太晚了。”“没有关系。”
11quite/quite soBritish EnglishBrE formal used to show that you agree with what someone is saying 是这样,是的SYN exactly
‘They really should have thought of this before.’ ‘Yes, quite.’
“他们之前确实就该想到这一点。”“正是。”
Examples from the Corpus
quite/quite so• No hotel service could be quite socrass.• The people might be made to kneel, but the elements were not quite soeasy to muzzle.• Mentalprogramming, of course, does not have to be quite soextreme.• It's not quite so good the second time around, never mind the fourth or fifth.• In fact, my recentdiet hadn't been quite soreckless.• It was all right walking in the mountains but not quite so safe-looking to drive.• The voices of the neighborhood teenagers are not quite soshrill.• At Carville, things were not quite sostark.
12quite somethingespecially British EnglishBrEGOOD/EXCELLENT used to say that someone or something is very impressive 令人难忘的人[事];不寻常的人[事]
It’s quite something to walk out on stage in front of 20,000 people.
上台面对两万名观众这很了不起。
Examples from the Corpus
quite something• Would have been quite something if they'd brought him back.• It is quite something to discovergiant tubeworms clustered around warm water flowing from the seafloor.• Matthau, who has died aged 79, was quite something.• Putting some one's shoulder back into place standing on a six inchledge is quite something.• Then he said: This is quite something.• To most of us, however, nothing is more obvious than that the universe really is quite something.
Examples from the Corpus
quite impossible• And the Presbyterians are quite impossible.• For others, that is quite impossible.• It was purchased because the sound of the river made reaching him by any other means quite impossible.• Very unlikely, though perhaps not quite impossible.• Citrusshrubs are wonderfully fragrantevergreens, but quite impossibleoutdoors without protection.• Jack tried but it was quite impossible; the button, like the steeringwheel, was red hot.• It is quite impossible to believe that he will fade from the scene on formalretirement in a few years' time.• So popular were the proscribedcelebrations that it proved quite impossible to eradicate them completely.
Originquite
(1300-1400)quit, quite“free of”((13-19 centuries)), from Old Frenchquite; → QUIT