disruptive
/dɪsˈrʌptɪv/ (bre, ipa) · /dɪsˈrʌptɪv/ (ame, ipa) · /dis-ˈrəp-tiv/ (ame, mw)
disruptive — 形容詞
- disruptivepositive
- more disruptivecomparative
- most disruptivesuperlative
1. describing someone or something that interrupts or prevents an activity, event,
干擾的
打斷正常活動或過程的
describing someone or something that interrupts or prevents an activity, event, or situation from continuing in a normal, orderly way
The teacher asked the student to leave after his disruptive behaviour continued through the lesson.
老師要求那名學生離開教室,因為他干擾上課的行為持續了整堂課。
attributive use: disruptive + behaviour
Saira's constant tapping was so disruptive that nobody could focus on the exam.
Saira 持續不斷的敲打聲干擾性太強,導致沒有人能專心考試。
pattern: so + disruptive + that-clause
A single disruptive passenger forced the flight to turn back to the airport.
一名喧鬧的乘客迫使航班折返機場。
The construction noise outside was disruptive to the meeting taking place in the library.
外面的施工噪音干擾了圖書館內正在進行的會議。
Heather found the notifications from her phone too disruptive while she was trying to study.
Heather 覺得手機的通知在她嘗試專心讀書時太干擾了。
- troublesome
more about causing difficulty or worry than about actively interrupting an activity
- unruly
only used for people (especially children in groups) who are hard to control; narrower in scope
- disturbing
implies emotional upset or anxiety rather than a practical interruption to an activity
- orderly
describes behaviour that follows rules and does not interrupt
- disciplined
focuses on self-control rather than the absence of interruption
文法句型
disruptive + noun
be + disruptive
disruptive + to + noun
so + disruptive + that-clause
用法筆記
Strongly negative — calling someone or something 'disruptive' in this sense is usually a criticism. Frequent in educational and workplace settings where order and quiet are expected.
常見錯誤
2. describing a new product, service, or company that changes how an industry tradi
顛覆性的
改變產業傳統運作方式的
describing a new product, service, or company that changes how an industry traditionally works, often making older methods or companies less important as a result
Emre's startup developed a disruptive payment system that replaced traditional banking methods.
Emre 的新創公司開發了一套顛覆性的支付系統,取代了傳統銀行業務。
attributive use: disruptive + noun (product/company)
The company's disruptive approach to education made online classes affordable for everyone.
該公司對教育採取的顛覆性做法,讓所有人都能負擔得起線上課程。
Many investors actively look for disruptive technologies that can reshape entire industries.
許多投資人積極尋找能夠重塑整個產業的顛覆性技術。
Takeshi argued that ride-sharing services were the most disruptive invention of the past decade.
Takeshi 認為叫車服務是過去十年最具顛覆性的發明。
Small disruptive companies often face strong resistance from older established firms.
小型顛覆性公司往往會面臨老牌企業的強烈抵制。
- innovative
broader — does not imply overturning or replacing existing systems; any new idea qualifies
- revolutionary
stronger — implies complete replacement of old methods, not just significant change
- groundbreaking
more positive — emphasises originality and achievement rather than the overthrowing of established players
- conventional
describes methods that follow traditional, accepted ways
- traditional
focuses on long-established practices rather than new approaches
- established
describes companies or methods that are firmly set in the existing system
文法句型
disruptive + noun
the most disruptive + noun
用法筆記
In business and technology contexts, this sense has a positive or neutral connotation — it describes innovation that challenges established norms. Most commonly paired with 'innovation', 'technology', or 'change'. Not used for mere technical faults or glitches.