typical

/ˈtɪpɪkl/ (bre, ipa) · /ˈtɪpɪkl/ (ame, ipa) · /ˈti-pi-kəl/ (ame, mw)

typical — 形容詞

  • typicalpositive
  • more typicalcomparative
  • most typicalsuperlative

1. having the usual features that make someone or something clearly belong to a par

1.形容詞B1
釋義

典型的

具有某類別最常見特徵的

having the usual features that make someone or something clearly belong to a particular group or category

例句

Sumin ordered a typical Korean breakfast of rice, soup, and side dishes.

Sumin 在餐廳點了一份典型的韓式早餐,有米飯、湯和小菜。

a typical [nationality] [meal] — representative example of a category

The tall brick buildings with wide windows are typical of 19th-century factory design.

這些有著寬大窗戶的高聳磚造建築,是 19 世紀工廠設計的典型風格。

typical of [period/style] — identifying features of a group

同義詞
  • representative

    More formal; directly emphasizes the group-membership aspect

  • characteristic

    Focuses on defining features rather than statistical commonality

  • standard

    Emphasizes the expected or normal quality, sometimes less precise

反義詞
  • atypical

    Direct opposite — not having the expected characteristics of a group

  • unusual

    Different from what is normal or expected; broader than 'atypical'

文法句型

typical of [noun phrase]

a typical [noun]

用法筆記

Frequently used with the preposition 'of' to introduce the group or category something belongs to: 'a style typical of the 1920s' or 'a reaction typical of teenagers'.

常見錯誤

This is a typical error made by beginners.
This is a common error made by beginners.
💡'typical' means 'representative of a group', not 'frequently occurring'. Use 'common' for high frequency.
She is a typical beautiful girl.
She is a typical teenage girl.
💡'typical' describes category membership, not degree of a quality. Don't use it before adjectives describing personal traits.

2. describes behavior or situations that are annoyingly predictable because they ma

2.形容詞B1
釋義

果然;不意外

用來抱怨令人失望但不意外的行為或情況

describes behavior or situations that are annoyingly predictable because they match your existing low opinion of someone or something

例句

Christopher forgot his passport again — that is so typical of him.

Christopher 又忘了帶護照——這真的太有他的風格了。

so typical of [person] — predictable negative behavior

The rain started just as the outdoor wedding began — totally typical for this season.

婚禮才剛在戶外開始,雨就下了起來——這個季節完全不意外。

totally typical for [situation] — expected annoyance

同義詞
  • predictable

    Focuses on unsurprising nature without the judgmental tone

  • expected

    Neutral tone; less critical than 'typical' in this sense

反義詞
  • unexpected

    Surprising in a way that defies expectations, whether good or bad

文法句型

so typical of [person]

typical that [clause]

typical! (exclamation)

用法筆記

Often used in informal speech as a standalone exclamation (e.g., 'Typical!') to express exasperation. The negative meaning depends entirely on context — without context, the word is understood in its neutral sense 1. Distinguish from sense 1 by the presence of a complaint: if the speaker is annoyed, this is sense 2.

常見錯誤

He is typical late for meetings.
He is typically late for meetings.
💡'typical' is an adjective; use the adverb 'typically' to modify another adjective or verb.
The weather is typical.' (when you mean 'the weather is typical of this season, and that's annoying')
The weather is typical for this time of year.
💡without 'of' or context, the listener will assume sense 1 (neutral).