ungovernable
/ʌnˈɡʌvənəbl/ (bre, ipa) · [ənɡˈʌvɚnəbəl] /ʌnˈɡʌvərnəbl/ (ame, ipa) · [ənɡˈʌvɚnəbəl] /ˌən-ˈgə-vər-nə-bəl How to pronounce ungovernable (audio)/ (ame, mw)
ungovernable — 形容詞
- ungovernablepositive
- more ungovernablecomparative
- most ungovernablesuperlative
1. so difficult for people in charge to control that rules no longer keep a person,
難管理
人、群體或地區難以管理控制
so difficult for people in charge to control that rules no longer keep a person, group, animal, or place in order
By midnight, the angry crowd had become ungovernable outside city hall.
到了半夜,憤怒的人群在市政廳外變得難以管束。
become ungovernable when public order breaks down
Jiwoo's horse turned ungovernable after the fireworks exploded near the gate.
大門附近的煙火爆開後,Jiwoo 的馬就變得難以控制。
ungovernable animal that no longer obeys control
Teachers sent Felix home when his shouting made the class ungovernable.
老師叫 Felix 回家,因為他的叫喊讓全班都難以管束。
Selim warned that the prison would become ungovernable without more guards.
Selim 警告說,若沒有更多警衛,那座監獄將會變得難以管理。
The spoiled puppy grows ungovernable whenever guests laugh at his tricks.
只要客人一笑牠的把戲,那隻被寵壞的小狗就會變得很難管。
- uncontrollable
wider in use; also describes feelings, fires, weather, or noise
- unmanageable
slightly milder; often means very hard rather than impossible to handle
- unruly
focuses on bad behavior, especially in children or crowds
- rebellious
stresses active resistance to authority rather than general disorder
- manageable
still possible to handle or control
- obedient
of people or animals that follow instructions
- orderly
behaving in a calm, controlled way
文法句型
become ungovernable
find + noun + ungovernable
ungovernable + noun
用法筆記
Often used for children, crowds, animals, classes, prisons, or regions when the person in charge cannot keep order. Stronger than 'uncontrollable' because it suggests authority or discipline has broken down, not just that something is hard to stop.