in-depth
/ˌɪn ˈdepθ/ (bre, ipa) · /ˌɪn ˈdepθ/ (ame, ipa) · /(ˈ)in-ˈdepth/ (ame, mw)
in-depth — 形容詞
1. done by examining every important part of something with great care, so that not
深入的
仔細詳盡的,全面的
done by examining every important part of something with great care, so that nothing important is missed
The Watanabe family asked for an in-depth explanation of the medical report before deciding.
Watanabe 一家人在做決定之前,要求醫生對那份醫療報告提供深入說明。
attributive adjective: in-depth + explanation
Aiko's in-depth study of local plants took her three years to complete.
Aiko 對當地植物的深入研究花了她整整三年才完成。
possessive + in-depth study: common noun pattern
The night-shift nurse wrote an in-depth report on each patient's condition.
那位大夜班護理師寫了一份深入報告,記錄每位病人的狀況。
Farouk and his team held an in-depth discussion about the new safety rules.
Farouk 和他的團隊針對新的安全規範進行了深入討論。
Leila's in-depth guide to Tokyo won a prize for local travel writing.
Leila 的東京深度導覽獲得了一項旅遊寫作獎。
- thorough
more general; suggests completeness but not necessarily the same level of fine detail as 'in-depth'
- comprehensive
emphasises covering a wide range of topics; 'in-depth' stresses depth within one topic
- detailed
closest in meaning; 'detailed' can describe any amount of detail, while 'in-depth' implies a thorough effort
- exhaustive
suggests that nothing has been left out; more absolute and formal than 'in-depth'
- superficial
opposite of thorough; only looking at the surface
- cursory
done quickly without attention to detail
- shallow
lacks the deep examination implied by 'in-depth'
文法句型
in-depth + noun
more in-depth + noun
the most in-depth + noun
用法筆記
Use the hyphenated form 'in-depth' before a noun (an in-depth analysis, an in-depth interview). Do not confuse with the adverbial phrase 'in depth' (no hyphen), which follows a verb: 'We discussed the topic in depth.'