中英文地名和人名建议选择专门化的地名译典或人名译典;有些缩写词在缩写词典中更容易查到;

    decadent查询结果如下:

    音标:['dekədənt]
    名词复数:decadents 词频:高频常用词
    基本释义/说明:adj.堕落的;颓废的;衰落的
    详解 词库 双语句典 英文释义 韦氏词典 英文百科 wiki词典 英文句库
    a.
    衰微的
    -扩展释义
    扩展解释:
    a.1. 堕落的;颓废的;衰落的,2. (文学、艺术)颓废期的;颓废派的,n.[C]1. 堕落者;颓废者,2. (常大写)颓废派艺术家(或作家)
    Many conservatives in the early 1900’s thought impressionistic art was decadent.
    20世纪初,许多保守主义者认为印象派的艺术是颓废的
    adj. 【计算机】
    衰落
    -同义词和反义词
    -decadent的不同词性形态

    形容词 变体/同根词

    decay的现在分词
    “The source of the smell turned out to be decaying fruit.”
    “The problems of decaying inner city areas.”
    Having undergone decay.
    “Even young children have teeth so decayed they need to be extracted.”
    Capable of decaying; perishable.

    名词 变体/同根词

    decadence.
    “But as it was, it has only served to show that his mind had suffered by the decadency of his circumstances.”
    “The census of 1850 furnishes the following facts connected with the decadency of the Southern soil.”
    “All in Uxmal proclaims the decadency of art, the relaxation of morals, the depravity of customs, the lewdness of the inhabitants.”
    That which causes decay.
    “Postia placenta was included in the fluoride tests because it is a more aggressive decayer of Douglas-fir.”
    The state or quality of being decayed.
    A state of moral or artistic decline or deterioration; decay
    “He began his respected career in the mid 1980s, creating gritty urban landscapes that commented on the decay and decadence of modern life.”
    “Pottery and dyes are rich, luscious and seductive, marks of decadence and luxury.”
    “For Ungaretti, this classical perspective would always be a safeguard against solipsism and aesthetic decadence.”

    动词 变体/同根词

    (intransitive) To deteriorate, to get worse, to lose strength or health, to decline in quality. || (intransitive, electronics, of storage media or the data on them) To undergo bit rot, that is, gradual degradation. || (computing) To undergo software rot, that is, to fail to be updated in a changing environment, so as to eventually become legacy or obsolete. || (physics) To undergo prolonged reduction in altitude (above the orbited body). || (intransitive, of organic material) To rot, to go bad. || (physics) To change by undergoing fission, by emitting radiation, or by capturing or losing one or more electrons. || (physics) To undergo optical decay, that is, to relax to a less excited state, usually by emitting a photon or phonon. || (intransitive, aviation) Loss of airspeed due to drag. || (transitive) To cause to rot or deteriorate.
    “Masses of leaves may begin to decay and smother the plant beneath them.”
    “For years Blackburn’s Church Street Pavilions have been allowed to crumble and decay so that the Grade ll listed buildings have become nothing more than an eyesore.”
    简典