mess

/mes/ (bre, ipa) · /mes/ (ame, ipa) · /ˈmes/ (ame, mw)

mess — 名詞

  • messsingular
  • messesplural

1. a condition in which a place or a collection of things is dirty, disorganized, a

1.名詞B1
釋義

髒亂

骯髒混亂的狀態

a condition in which a place or a collection of things is dirty, disorganized, and out of place — like a kitchen after cooking all day, or a child's room with clothes and toys scattered everywhere.

例句

Mira's bedroom was such a mess that she could not find her school uniform.

Mira 的房間亂成一團,她根本找不到自己的校服。

be a mess — describing a state

The kitchen became a complete mess after Christopher tried to bake a cake.

Christopher 試著烤蛋糕之後,廚房變得一團糟。

become a + adj + mess

同義詞
  • disorder

    more formal; describes lack of order rather than dirt

  • chaos

    stronger; suggests complete confusion and lack of control

  • clutter

    specifically about too many things in a space, not about dirt

反義詞
  • order

    opposite state — everything in its proper place

  • tidiness

    usual word for a clean, organized appearance

文法句型

a + mess

in a + mess

be a + mess

用法筆記

Often used with 'a' in the singular ('a mess') even when referring to a general state. Frequently found in the fixed phrase 'in a mess' (describing a location's condition) and 'be a mess' (describing a person or thing).

常見錯誤

The room is mess.
The room is a mess.
💡'mess' is a countable noun in this sense and needs an article.

2. the solid waste that comes out of an animal's body — usually referring to a pet'

2.名詞B2
釋義

糞便

動物固體排泄物

the solid waste that comes out of an animal's body — usually referring to a pet's excrement that needs to be cleaned up.

例句

The dog had left a mess on the living room carpet.

那隻狗在客廳地毯上大便。

leave a mess — common collocation

Kian asked Mira to pick up the puppy's mess from the garden.

Kian 請 Mira 去撿花園裡小狗的大便。

同義詞
  • droppings

    formal term, used especially for wild animals and birds

  • excrement

    clinical or formal; much less common in everyday speech

文法句型

leave + a/possesive + mess

clean up + mess

用法筆記

Primarily used for pet animals (dogs, cats). Not used for human waste. The expression 'dog mess' is very common in public notices in British English.

常見錯誤

I need to clean the dog's messes.
I need to clean up the dog's mess.
💡'mess' in this sense is typically uncountable or singular.

3. a set of troublesome circumstances that arise when things go badly due to poor o

3.名詞B1
釋義

困境

一團亂的麻煩局面

a set of troublesome circumstances that arise when things go badly due to poor organization or bad decisions — such as a company struggling with huge debts or a traveller stranded by booking errors.

例句

The company's finances were in a mess after the manager quit without warning.

經理無預警辭職後,公司的財務陷入一團亂。

in a mess — describing a difficult situation

Lukas got into a real mess when he missed the last train home.

Lukas 錯過了最後一班回家的火車,陷入了真正的困境。

get into a mess — entering a difficult situation

同義詞
  • chaos

    stronger — suggests total disorder and confusion

  • shambles

    informal British English; emphasizes failure or collapse

  • predicament

    more formal; an unpleasant situation that is hard to get out of

反義詞
  • order

    a state where things are well-organized and under control

文法句型

in a + mess

get into a + mess

sort out a + mess

用法筆記

Frequently used with 'get into' (entering the situation), 'sort out' or 'clear up' (resolving it), and 'leave' (creating it for someone else). This sense is strongly informal — use 'crisis' or 'difficulty' in formal writing.

常見錯誤

The situation is in mess.
The situation is a mess.' (or 'The situation is in a mess.')
💡the article 'a' is required.

4. a person who is experiencing severe emotional or practical problems and cannot m

4.名詞B2
釋義

問題人物

生活一團糟的人

a person who is experiencing severe emotional or practical problems and cannot manage their life well — for example, someone going through a painful divorce or struggling with deep personal difficulties.

例句

After losing his job, Caleb became a complete mess and stopped seeing his friends.

Caleb 失業後整個人徹底崩潰,也不再和朋友見面了。

become a mess — entering a troubled state

Élise was a total mess the week after her grandfather passed away.

Élise 在她祖父過世後的那個星期情緒完全失控。

同義詞
  • wreck

    even more informal and dramatic than 'mess'

  • basket case

    very informal, potentially offensive; someone unable to function

文法句型

be a + mess

feel like a + mess

用法筆記

Always needs an article ('a mess'). Strongly informal — cannot be used in formal or professional descriptions of mental health. Use 'struggling', 'distressed', or 'in a difficult period' in serious contexts.

常見錯誤

He is mess since the accident.
He has been a mess since the accident.
💡the article 'a' is required, and the adjective form is not 'mess'.

5. the result of doing something very badly, so that it fails or is spoiled — used

5.名詞B2
釋義

搞砸

把某事做得非常糟糕

the result of doing something very badly, so that it fails or is spoiled — used in the fixed phrase 'make a mess of' something, such as an exam, a job, or a relationship.

例句

Xiu made a real mess of her presentation by reading straight from the slides.

Xiu 的簡報做得一團糟,因為她從頭到尾照著投影片念。

make a mess of — fixed phrase for botching

Christopher made a mess of the repair job and had to call a professional plumber.

Christopher 把維修工作搞得亂七八糟,最後只好找專業水電工來。

同義詞
  • botch

    more formal; British English; to spoil by clumsy work

  • mishandle

    formal; to deal with a situation badly

  • bundle

    informal British; to fail at something through clumsiness

反義詞

文法句型

make a mess of + noun phrase

用法筆記

Always used in 'make a mess of + noun phrase'. The mess here is a result, not a physical state. Can be intensified with adjectives like 'real', 'complete', 'absolute', 'terrible'.

常見錯誤

I messed of the exam.
I made a mess of the exam.
💡the phrase requires 'make a mess of', not the verb 'mess' alone.

6. a facility on a military base where soldiers, sailors, and air force personnel g

6.名詞B2
釋義

軍用餐廳

軍隊成員用餐的廳舍

a facility on a military base where soldiers, sailors, and air force personnel go to eat together and relax when off duty.

例句

The soldiers ate dinner in the mess hall at six o'clock every evening.

士兵們每天晚上六點在軍用餐廳吃晚餐。

mess hall — common compound

The officers' mess had long wooden tables and a fireplace at one end.

軍官餐廳裡有長長的木桌,一端還有壁爐。

同義詞
  • mess hall

    more common term for the general military dining facility

  • canteen

    a general dining facility, not limited to military

  • dining hall

    neutral term for any institutional dining room

文法句型

the + mess

officers' mess

mess hall

用法筆記

Always used in a military context. Different branches use specific terms: 'officers' mess', 'sergeants' mess', 'wardroom mess' (navy). The compound 'mess hall' is common for the general eating area.

7. a large room in a school, university, or workplace where people eat their meals

7.名詞B2
釋義

公共食堂

學校或公司的大型用餐室

a large room in a school, university, or workplace where people eat their meals together.

例句

The university's student mess serves breakfast, lunch, and dinner every day.

大學的學生食堂每天供應早、午、晚餐。

The staff mess on the second floor is reserved for teachers and administrators.

二樓的員工餐廳只開放給老師和行政人員。

staff mess — fixed compound

同義詞
  • dining hall

    more internationally common; a large room for communal meals

  • cafeteria

    a self-service dining area; more common in American English

  • canteen

    British English; a dining facility in a workplace or school

文法句型

the + mess

student mess

staff mess

用法筆記

Primarily British English. In other varieties of English, 'dining hall' or 'cafeteria' is more common. This sense is distinct from the military use (noun sense 6); it refers to civilian institutional dining rooms.

8. a large amount or number of something, especially when it appears disorganized o

8.名詞C1
釋義

大量

數量很多且雜亂的某物

a large amount or number of something, especially when it appears disorganized or abundant — like a pile of paperwork or a tangle of wires.

例句

There was a whole mess of paperwork waiting on the manager's desk.

經理桌上堆了滿滿一大堆文書工作。

a whole mess of — intensifying the quantity

Caleb found a mess of old photographs and letters in his grandmother's attic.

Caleb 在奶奶的閣樓裡發現了一大堆老照片和信件。

同義詞
  • a pile of

    common; suggests things stacked or heaped

  • a heap of

    suggests an untidy mound of things

  • a jumble of

    emphasizes the mixed, disorganized quality

文法句型

a mess of + noun phrase

用法筆記

Always in the pattern 'a mess of + noun phrase'. This sense is primarily American English and informal. Unlike sense 1, it focuses on abundance rather than untidiness, though the two often overlap. The 'mess' here is the collection itself, not a state.

常見錯誤

A mess of people attended the concert.
A crowd of people attended the concert.
💡'a mess of' is used for things, not people (except in very informal regional American English).

mess — 動詞