unimaginative
/ˌʌnɪˈmædʒɪnətɪv/ (bre, ipa) · [ənɪmˈædʒˌɪnətɪv] /ˌʌnɪˈmædʒɪnətɪv/ (ame, ipa) · [ənɪmˈædʒˌɪnətɪv] /ˌən-ə-ˈmaj-nə-tiv; -ˈma-jə-ˌnā-, -nə- How to pronounce unimaginative (audio)/ (ame, mw)
unimaginative — 形容詞
- unimaginativepositive
- more unimaginativecomparative
- most unimaginativesuperlative
1. If you describe a person or their work as unimaginative, you mean it shows no fr
無新意
缺乏創意或原創性;平庸無趣
If you describe a person or their work as unimaginative, you mean it shows no fresh thinking or creativity; it feels ordinary, safe, and predictable, as if the maker put in no real effort to be original.
Mei described the grey-walled hotel room as bland and unimaginative.
Mei 形容那間灰牆飯店房間既平淡又無新意。
collocation: bland and unimaginative
The newspaper critic called Arjun's latest novel dull and unimaginative.
報紙評論家認為 Arjun 的最新小說沉悶又缺乏新意。
Omar groaned that the school canteen's unimaginative menu served pasta yet again.
Omar 抱怨學校餐廳的菜單毫無新意,又是義大利麵。
Kwame's unimaginative essay simply repeated the lecture notes without any new ideas.
Kwame 那篇無新意的文章只是重複了講義內容,沒有任何新點子。
The plot was so unimaginative that Elena guessed the ending halfway through.
劇情毫無新意,Elena 看到一半就猜到了結局。
- unoriginal
focuses on ideas being derivative or copied from elsewhere, rather than simply uninspired
- uninspired
milder; often describes a temporary lack of spark, not a settled trait
- pedestrian
more literary; stresses dull ordinariness that bores rather than just fails to excite
- imaginative
full of new and exciting ideas; the direct opposite
- creative
bringing new things into existence through original thought
- inventive
skilled at thinking up clever new solutions or devices
用法筆記
Typically describes creative output — designs, writing, solutions, menus — rather than a person's innate mental ability to form images. The word criticises the lack of effort or spark in the result, not a permanent incapacity.