inexhaustible
/ˌɪnɪɡˈzɔːstəbl/ (bre, ipa) · /ˌɪnɪɡˈzɔːstəbl/ (ame, ipa) · /ˌi-nig-ˈzȯ-stə-bəl/ (ame, mw)
inexhaustible — 形容詞
- inexhaustiblepositive
- more inexhaustiblecomparative
- most inexhaustiblesuperlative
1. If something is inexhaustible, it is available in such a large amount, or renewe
用不盡
多到似乎永遠用不完
If something is inexhaustible, it is available in such a large amount, or renewed so steadily, that people never seem able to use it all.
The library seemed to have an inexhaustible supply of old maps.
圖書館裡似乎有用不盡的老地圖可查。
collocation: inexhaustible supply of
After lunch, Christopher still faced an inexhaustible stream of questions from the children.
吃過午餐後,Christopher 仍得面對孩子們一連串問不完的問題。
collocation: inexhaustible stream of
Melting mountain snow gives the village an inexhaustible source of water.
融化的山雪替村子帶來幾乎用不盡的水源。
To the volunteers, the pile of donated clothes looked almost inexhaustible on opening day.
對志工來說,開放第一天那堆捐來的衣服看起來幾乎像永遠拿不完。
Even after sunset, the festival kitchen had an inexhaustible stock of hot soup.
即使天黑了,節慶廚房裡仍有用不盡的熱湯。
- abundant
means there is a lot now, but does not suggest the supply can keep going without end
- unlimited
usually describes a removed cap or restriction, not a source that cannot be used up
- endless
often focuses on time or repetition rather than on a usable supply
- renewable
narrower and often used for energy or natural resources that nature replaces
文法句型
inexhaustible + [supply/source/stream/stock]
be + inexhaustible
用法筆記
Often used with nouns such as supply, source, stream, reserve, or stock to stress that the amount seems impossible to finish. With abstract nouns like questions or curiosity, it still points to something that keeps coming rather than to a person's physical strength.