phrase [ freiz] n.短语;习惯用语
phrase [freiz] n. 短语;习惯用语
phrase [ freiz] n.警句,乐句,短语
phrase [freiz] 短语
紧箍咒 inhibiting magic phrase
口头禅 pet phrase
Additional Words and Phrases
Additional Words and Phrases
Additional Words and Phrases
Additional Words and Phrases
Additional Words and Phrases
Additional Words and Phrases
Additional Words and Phrases
coin a neat phrase 话说得很恰当
The longest word in the English language is the one following the phrase: "And now a word from our sponsor."
英语中最长的单词是由此引发的:“现在请赞助者XXX。”
Many foreign words and phrases have enriched the English language.
许多外来词和短语丰富了英语。
Every day the work begins with the ritual phrases of greeting.
每天,工作以例行的相互问候开始。
I phrased my comment delicately so as not to upset her.
我的评论措辞谨慎,以免使她不安。
Each time the dream was a promise out of our ancient articles of faith, phrases from the constitution, lines from the great anthem of the nation, guarantees from the Bill of Rights, all ending with a vision that they might one day all come true。
每一次梦想都是来自于古老的忠诚的承诺,宪法中的词句,国歌中的歌词,人权法案所保证,都是以希望有一天它能成为现实的期望来结束的。
What does the phrase ‘learning to use a computer’ mean? It sounds like ‘learning to drive a car’; that is , it sounds as if there is some set of definite skills that, once acquired, enable one to use a computer.
“学习使用计算机”这个短语是什么意思呢?听起来像是“学习驾驶汽车”也就是说,好象里面有一套确定的技能,一旦获得,就会使用计算机了。
It is a shame!
这是一句可以用在许多适当情况的口语 (Catch-all phrase),是表示一种轻度的「遗憾」或「同情」(a form of sympathy or regret) 但没有「羞耻」的意思。
It is a shame that your car got stuck in the snow.(你的汽车陷在雪里,真糟糕。)
When I said, "I lost ten dollars from my pocket.",he replied, "It is a shame!"(当我说:「我从口袋里掉了十块钱」,他回答:「真遗憾?」)
至於 "What a shame",其实与 "it is a shame" 意思相似,也有 "It is too bad" 的味道。例如:
What a shame that his son's behavior is so rude.(他儿子的粗鲁行为是令人遗憾的)
Words and Phrases
In our efforts to adjust differences of opinion we should be free from intolerance of passion, and our judgements should be unmoved by alluring phrases and unvexed by selfish interests.
Grover Cleveland, American president
在我们努力协调意见的分歧时,应当抛弃偏执与意气用事;我们的判断不应当被花言巧语蒙骗,也不应被个人私利扰乱。
美国总统克利夫兰.G.
phrase n.片语;警句;措辞
coin a neat phrase 话说得很恰当
To ask someone how long they have done something, you can use the phrase: How long have you . . . ? / How long have you . . .? e.g.: How long have you lived in Beijing? / How long have you lived in Beijing?
要问某人做某事已经多长时间了,你可以用这个短语:How long have you . . . ? / 做 . . .已经多长时间了?例如: How long have you lived in Beijing? / 你在北京已经住了多久了?
To describe where something is accurately, use phrases to describe its position, e.g.: It’s next to the coffee shop. / It’s next to the coffee shop. It’s beside the restaurant / It’s beside the restaurant.
要精确地描述某地在何处,用下面的短语来描述它的位置,例如:It’s next to the coffee shop. / 在咖啡厅隔壁。 It’s beside the restaurant / 在餐馆旁边。
Again, to describe the position of a place, you can use phrases like next to . . . / next to . . . near . . . / near e.g.: There’s a shop near your hotel / There’s a shop near your hotel.
再次提醒大家,要描述某地的位置,用像next to . . . / 紧挨着 . . . near . . . / 在 . . . 的附近这样的短语。例如: There’s a shop near your hotel /在你的饭店附近有一家商店。
Again, if you would like to do something, remember the phrase I would like to . . . / I would like to . . . (or shorter version: I’d like to . . . / I’d like to . . .) e.g.: I’d like to buy some books / I’d like to buy some books.
再重复一次,如果表达你想做某事,用短语I would like to . . . / 我想 . . . (或者用它的简略形式: I’d like to . . . / 我想 . . .) 例如: I’d like to buy some books / 我想买几本书。
词 [cí] /works/phrases/classical Chinese poem/word/diction/
读 [dòu] /comma/phrase marked by pause/
惯用语 [guàn yòng yǔ] /(n) idiom; word or phrase used colloqially /
片语 [piàn yǔ] /phrase/
Darwin had a phrase to describe those ignorant of evolution: they "look at an organic being as average looks at a ship, as at something wholly beyond his comprehension."
达尔文有一句话描述那些对进化一无所知的人,他们“看有机的生命如同野人看船,好像看某种完全不能理解的东西”。
Many people mistakenly believe the term drug refers only to some sort of medicine or an illegal chemical taken by drug addicts.
很多人错误地认为“药物”这个词仅仅指某些药品或是吸毒者服用的违禁化学品。
They don't realize that familiar substances such as alcohol and tobacco are also drugs.
他们没有意识到诸如酒精、烟草这些我们熟悉的物质也是药物。
This is why the more neutral term substance is now used by many physicians and psychologists.
这也是现在许多内科医生和心理学家使用“物质”这个更加中性的词的原因。
The phrase "substance abuse" is often used instead of "drug abuse" to make clear that substances such as alcohol and tobacco can be just as harmfully misused as heroin and cocaine.
他们常用“物质滥用”而不用“药物滥用”来清楚表明滥用酒精、烟草这样的物质如同滥用海洛因和可卡因一样有害。
"All men are created equal." We've heard it many times, but it still has important meaning for education in a democratic society.
“人人生来平等”这句话我们已听过无数次,但它对民主社会的教育仍然有着极其重要的寓意。
Although the phrase was used by this country's founders to denote equality before the law, it has also been interpreted to mean equality of opportunity.
尽管这句话被国家缔造者们用来预示法律面前人人平等,它也被解释为机会面前人人平等。
That concept implies educational opportunity for all children — the right of each child to receive help in learning to the limits of his or her capacity, whether that capacity be small or great.
这一概念暗示了所有儿童都有接受教育的机会——即每个儿童,不管其本身的能力大小与否,都有权利在学习上最大限度地得到帮助。
{adj: Gordian} extremely intricate; usually in phrase `Gordian knot'
{adj: Scots, Scottish, Scotch} of or relating to or characteristic of Scotland or its people or culture or its English dialect or Gaelic language
"Scots Gaelic"
"the Scots community in New York"
"`Scottish' tends to be the more formal term as in `The Scottish Symphony' or `Scottish authors' or `Scottish mountains'"
"`Scotch' is in disfavor with Scottish people and is used primarily outside Scotland except in such frozen phrases as `Scotch broth' or `Scotch whiskey' or `Scotch plaid'"
{adj: Tamil} of or relating to a speaker of the Tamil language or the language itself
"the Tamil Tigers are fighting the Sinhalese in Sri Lanka"
"Tamil agglutinative phrases"
{adj: amendatory} effecting amendment
"added amendatory phrases to the text"
{adj: autosemantic} of a word or phrase meaningful in isolation, independent of context
{adj: banal, commonplace, hackneyed, old-hat, shopworn, stock, threadbare, timeworn, tired, trite, well-worn} repeated too often; overfamiliar through overuse
"bromidic sermons"
"his remarks were trite and commonplace"
"hackneyed phrases"
"a stock answer"
"repeating threadbare jokes"
"parroting some timeworn axiom"
"the trite metaphor `hard as nails'"
{adj: categorematic} of a term or phrase capable of standing as the subject or (especially) the predicate of a proposition
<-> syncategorematic
{adj: cliched, ready-made} repeated regularly without thought or originality
"ready-made phrases"
{adj: concerned} in relation (or in regard) to; especially as in the phrases
"as far as x is concerned"
"where x is concerned"
{adj: happy, well-chosen} well expressed and to the point
"a happy turn of phrase"
"a few well-chosen words"
{adj: infelicitous} not appropriate in application; defective
"an infelicitous remark"
"infelicitous phrasing"
"the infelicitous typesetting was due to illegible copy"
<-> felicitous
{adj: less} (nonstandard in some uses but often idiomatic with measure phrases) fewer
"less than three weeks"
"no less than 50 people attended"
"in 25 words or less"
{adj: limiting} strictly limiting the reference of a modified word or phrase
"the restrictive clause in `Each made a list of the books that had influenced him' limits the books on the list to only those particular ones defined by the clause"
{adj: looking, sounding} appearing to be as specified; usually used as combining forms
"left their clothes dirty looking"
"a most disagreeable looking character"
"angry-looking"
"liquid-looking"
"severe-looking policemen on noble horses"
"fine-sounding phrases"
"taken in by high-sounding talk"
{adj: nominal} pertaining to a noun or to a word group that functions as a noun
"nominal phrase"
"noun phrase"
{adj: nonrestrictive} not limiting the reference of a modified word or phrase
"the nonrestrictive clause in `I always buy his books, which have influenced me greatly,' refers to his books generally and adds an additional fact about them"
{adj: nonstandard} not conforming to the language usage of a prestige group within a community
"a nonstandard dialect is one used by uneducated speakers or socially disfavored groups"
"the common core of nonstandard words and phrases in folk speech"- A.R.Dunlap
<-> standard
{adj: obscure, vague} not clearly understood or expressed
"an obscure turn of phrase"
"an impulse to go off and fight certain obscure battles of his own spirit"-Anatole Broyard
"their descriptions of human behavior become vague, dull, and unclear"- P.A.Sorokin
"vague...forms of speech...have so long passed for mysteries of science"- John Locke
{adj: orotund, rotund, round, pear-shaped} (of sounds) full and rich
"orotund tones"
"the rotund and reverberating phrase"
"pear-shaped vowels"
{adj: phrasal} of or relating to or functioning as a phrase
"phrasal verb"
{adj: plagiaristic, plagiarized, plagiarised} copied and passed off as your own
"used plagiarized data in his thesis"
"a work dotted with plagiarized phrases"
{adj: pleonastic, redundant, tautologic, tautological} repetition of same sense in different words
"`a true fact' and `a free gift' are pleonastic expressions"
"the phrase `a beginner who has just started' is tautological"
"at the risk of being redundant I return to my original proposition"- J.B.Conant
{adj: prepositional} of or relating to or formed with a preposition
"prepositional phrase"
{adj: repeatable, quotable} able or fit to be repeated or quoted
"what he said was not repeatable in polite company"
"he comes up with so many quotable phrases"
<-> unquotable, unrepeatable
{adj: stereotyped, stereotypic, stereotypical, unimaginative} lacking spontaneity or originality or individuality
"stereotyped phrases of condolence"
"even his profanity was unimaginative"
{adj: synsemantic} of a word or phrase meaningful only when it occurs in the company of other words
{adj: well-turned} (of language) aptly and pleasingly expressed
"a well-turned phrase"
{adv: adverbially} as an adverb
"the prepositional phrase here is used adverbially"
{adv: much, practically} (degree adverb used before a noun phrase) for all practical purposes but not completely
"much the same thing happened every time"
"practically everything in Hinduism is the manifestation of a god"
{adv: not only} not merely (used to introduce the first phrase of a correlative construction and usually followed by `but' or `but also')
"not only was he poor, but..."
{adv: predicatively} occuring within the predicate phrase
"predicatively used adjectives"
{adv: sic} intentionally so written (used after a printed word or phrase)
{n: Ask Jeeves} a widely used search engine accepting plain English questions or phrases or terms
{n: Celestial City, City of God, Heavenly City, Holy City} phrases used to refer to Heaven
"the Celestial City was Christian's goal in Bunyan's `Pilgrim's Progress'"
{n: Gallicism} a word or phrase borrowed from French
{n: Latinism} a word or phrase borrowed from Latin
{n: Sullivan, Louis Sullivan, Louis Henry Sullivan, Louis Henri Sullivan} United States architect known for his steel framed skyscrapers and for coining the phrase `form follows function' (1856-1924)
{n: Vaughan, Sarah Vaughan} United States jazz singer noted for her complex bebop phrasing and scat singing (1924-1990)
{n: abbreviation} a shortened form of a word or phrase
{n: accentuation} the use or application of an accent; the relative prominence of syllables in a phrase or utterance
{n: adjunct} a construction that can be used to extend the meaning of a word or phrase but is not one of the main constituents of a sentence
{n: anagram} a word or phrase spelled by rearranging the letters of another word or phrase
{n: antecedent} the referent of an anaphor; a phrase or clause that is referred to by an anaphoric pronoun
{n: antigram} an anagram that means the opposite of the original word or phrase
"`restful' is the antigram of `fluster'"
{n: apposition} a grammatical relation between a word and a noun phrase that follows
"`Rudolph the red-nosed reindeer' is an example of apposition"
{n: aptness, appositeness} appropriateness for the occasion
"the phrase had considerable aptness"
<-> inappositeness, inaptness
{n: article} (grammar) a determiner that may indicate the specificity of reference of a noun phrase
{n: attack, tone-beginning} a decisive manner of beginning a musical tone or phrase
{n: auxiliary verb} a word used in a verb phrase as an adjunct to another verb
{n: buzzword, cant} stock phrases that have become nonsense through endless repetition
{n: call, claim} a demand especially in the phrase "the call of duty"
{n: catchphrase, catch phrase} a phrase that has become a catchword
{n: cease} (`cease' is a noun only in the phrase `without cease') end
{n: charades} player acts out a phrase for others to guess
{n: chiasmus} inversion in the second of two parallel phrases
{n: complementation} the grammatical relation of a word or phrase to a predicate
{n: complement} a word or phrase used to complete a grammatical construction
{n: conceit} a witty or ingenious turn of phrase
"he could always come up with some inspired off-the-wall conceit"
{n: condition, shape} the state of (good) health (especially in the phrases `in condition' or `in shape' or `out of condition' or `out of shape')
{n: conjunction, conjunctive, connective, continuative} an uninflected function word that serves to conjoin words or phrases or clauses or sentences
{n: conjunction} the grammatical relation between linguistic units (words or phrases or clauses) that are connected by a conjunction
{n: constituent, grammatical constituent} (grammar) a word or phrase or clause forming part of a larger grammatical construction
{n: credit} used in the phrase `to your credit' in order to indicate an achievement deserving praise
"she already had several performances to her credit";
{n: dangling modifier, misplaced modifier} a word or phrase apparently modifying an unintended word because of its placement in a sentence: e.g., `when young' in `when young, circuses appeal to all of us'
{n: defensive, defensive attitude} an attitude of defensiveness (especially in the phrase `on the defensive')
{n: definition} a concise explanation of the meaning of a word or phrase or symbol
{n: deriving, derivation, etymologizing} (historical linguistics) an explanation of the historical origins of a word or phrase
{n: determiner, determinative} one of a limited class of noun modifiers that determine the referents of noun phrases
{n: devices} an inclination or desire; used in the plural in the phrase `left to your own devices'
"eventually the family left the house to the devices of this malevolent force"
"the children were left to their own devices"
{n: dictionary definition} a definition that reports the standard uses of a word or phrase or symbol
{n: disambiguator} (computer science) a natural language processing application that tries to determine the intended meaning of a word or phrase by examining the linguistic context in which it is used
{n: dudgeon, high dudgeon} a feeling of intense indignation (now used only in the phrase `in high dudgeon')
{n: epanaphora, anaphora} repetition of a word or phrase at the beginning of successive clauses
{n: epithet} descriptive word or phrase
{n: expletive} a word or phrase conveying no independent meaning but added to fill out a sentence or metrical line
{n: gemination} the doubling of a word or phrase (as for rhetorical effect)
{n: idiom, idiomatic expression, phrasal idiom, set phrase, phrase} an expression whose meanings cannot be inferred from the meanings of the words that make it up
{n: key} a list of words or phrases that explain symbols or abbreviations
{n: law of the land} a phrase used in the Magna Carta to refer to the then established law of the kingdom (as distinct from Roman or civil law); today it refers to fundamental principles of justice commensurate with due process
"the United States Constitution declares itself to be `the supreme law of the land'"
{n: leading question} a question phrased in such a way as to suggest the desired answer; a lawyer may ask leading questions on cross-examination
{n: lead} a position of leadership (especially in the phrase `take the lead')
"he takes the lead in any group"
"we were just waiting for someone to take the lead"
"they didn't follow our lead"
{n: leitmotiv, leitmotif} a melodic phrase that accompanies the reappearance of a person or situation (as in Wagner's operas)
{n: localism} a phrase or pronunciation that is peculiar to a particular locality
{n: locative role, locative} the semantic role of the noun phrase that designates the place of the state or action denoted by the verb
{n: logogram, logograph} a single written symbol that represents an entire word or phrase without indicating its pronunciation
"7 is a logogram that is pronounced `seven' in English and `nanatsu' in Japanese"
{n: mantra} a commonly repeated word or phrase
"she repeated `So pleased with how its going' at intervals like a mantra"
{n: memorability} the quality of being worth remembering
"continuous change results in lack of memorability"
"true memorability of phrase"
{n: modification, qualifying, limiting} the grammatical relation that exists when a word qualifies the meaning of the phrase
{n: monosemy} having a single meaning (absence of ambiguity) usually of individual words or phrases
<-> polysemy
{n: name, epithet} a defamatory or abusive word or phrase
{n: neologism, neology, coinage} a newly invented word or phrase
{n: neologism, neology, coinage} the act of inventing a word or phrase
{n: nihil obstat} the phrase used by the official censor of the Roman Catholic Church to say that a publication has been examined and contains nothing offensive to the church
{n: nonrestrictive clause, descriptive clause} a subordinate clause that does not limit or restrict the meaning of the noun phrase it modifies
{n: nota bene, NB, N.B.} a Latin phrase (or its abbreviation) used to indicate that special attention should be paid to something
"the margins of his book were generously supplied with pencilled NBs"
{n: noun phrase, nominal phrase, nominal} a phrase that can function as the subject or object of a verb
{n: nude} without clothing (especially in the phrase `in the nude')
"they swam in the nude"
{n: obscenity, smut, vulgarism, filth, dirty word} an offensive or indecent word or phrase
{n: old} past times (especially in the phrase `in days of old')
{n: omission, deletion} any process whereby sounds are left out of spoken words or phrases
{n: ostinato} a musical phrase repeated over and over during a composition
{n: palindrome} a word or phrase that reads the same backward as forward
{n: password, watchword, word, parole, countersign} a secret word or phrase known only to a restricted group
"he forgot the password"
{n: phrase book} a book containing common expressions in a foreign language along with their translations
{n: phrase, musical phrase} a short musical passage
{n: phrase} an expression consisting of one or more words forming a grammatical constituent of a sentence
{n: phrase} dance movements that are linked in a single choreographic sequence
{n: phrasing} the grouping of musical phrases in a melodic line
{n: polysemy, lexical ambiguity} the ambiguity of an individual word or phrase that can be used (in different contexts) to express two or more different meanings
<-> monosemy
{n: predicate, verb phrase} one of the two main constituents of a sentence; the predicate contains the verb and its complements
{n: prepositional phrase} a phrase beginning with a preposition
{n: preposition} a function word that combines with a noun or pronoun or noun phrase to form a prepositional phrase that can have an adverbial or adjectival relation to some other word
{n: pronominal phrase, pronominal} a phrase that functions as a pronoun
{n: pronoun} a function word that is used in place of a noun or noun phrase
{n: punctuation, punctuation mark} the marks used to clarify meaning by indicating separation of words into sentences and clauses and phrases
{n: punctuation} the use of certain marks to clarify meaning of written material by grouping words grammatically into sentences and clauses and phrases
{n: question, interrogation, interrogative, interrogative sentence} a sentence of inquiry that asks for a reply
"he asked a direct question"
"he had trouble phrasing his interrogations"
{n: reciprocal pronoun} a pronoun or pronominal phrase (as `each other') that expresses a mutual action or relationship between the individuals indicated in the plural subject
"The sentence `They cared for each other' contains a reciprocal pronoun"
{n: reference} the relation between a word or phrase and the object or idea it refers to
"he argued that reference is a consequence of conditioned reflexes"
{n: release, tone ending} (music) the act or manner of terminating a musical phrase or tone
{n: response} a phrase recited or sung by the congregation following a versicle by the priest or minister
{n: restrictive clause} a subordinate clause that limits or restricts the meaning of the noun phrase it modifies
{n: resultant role, result} the semantic role of the noun phrase whose referent exists only by virtue of the activity denoted by the verb in the clause
{n: rewording, recasting, rephrasing} changing a particular word or phrase
{n: rondeau, rondel} a French verse form of 10 or 13 lines running on two rhymes; the opening phrase is repeated as the refrain of the second and third stanzas
{n: roundelay} a song in which a line or phrase is repeated as the refrain
{n: saying, expression, locution} a word or phrase that particular people use in particular situations
"pardon the expression"
{n: second hand} an intermediate person; used in the phrase `at second hand'
"he could learn at second hand from books"
{n: semantic role, participant role} an entity realized by a noun or noun phrase in a clause or sentence
{n: sequence} several repetitions of a melodic phrase in different keys
{n: shebang} an entire system; used in the phrase `the whole shebang'
{n: spectacle} a blunder that makes you look ridiculous; used in the phrase `make a spectacle of' yourself
{n: stride} significant progress (especially in the phrase "make strides")
"they made big strides in productivity"
{n: string} a linear sequence of symbols (characters or words or phrases)
{n: subordination} the grammatical relation of a modifying word or phrase to its head
{n: symploce} repetition of a word or phrase at the beginning and another at the end of successive clauses, i.e., simultaneous use of anaphora and epistrophe
{n: syntax, sentence structure, phrase structure} the grammatical arrangement of words in sentences
{n: temporal role, temporal} the semantic role of the noun phrase that designating the time of the state or action denoted by the verb
{n: term} one of the substantive phrases in a logical proposition
"the major term of a syllogism must occur twice"
{n: tune, melody, air, strain, melodic line, line, melodic phrase} a succession of notes forming a distinctive sequence
"she was humming an air from Beethoven"
{n: turn of phrase, turn of expression} a distinctive spoken or written expression
"John's succinct turn of phrase persuaded her that it would not be a good idea"
{n: view} purpose; the phrase `with a view to' means `with the intention of' or `for the purpose of'
"he took the computer with a view to pawning it"
{n: why, wherefore} the cause or intention underlying an action or situation, especially in the phrase `the whys and wherefores'
{n: wording, diction, phrasing, phraseology, choice of words, verbiage} the manner in which something is expressed in words
"use concise military verbiage"- G.S.Patton
{v: coin} of phrases or words
{v: fall} come out ; issue
"silly phrases fell from her mouth"
{v: give voice, formulate, word, phrase, articulate} put into words or an expression
"He formulated his concerns to the board of trustees"
{v: gloss, comment, annotate} provide interlinear explanations for words or phrases
"He annotated on what his teacher had written"
{v: gloss} provide an interlinear translation of a word or phrase
I, however, had begun to think about Maood's phrase 'the heart of the palm'.
而我开始琢磨马苏德的话: "椰枣树的心。 "
Another phrase from the Bible flashed into my mind;
另一句《圣经》中的名言闪过我心头:
Some even suggest that mobile videophones could overtake television as the major source of visual information, giving the phrase " something to phone home about " a whole new meaning.
有些专家甚至认为,移动视像电话将超过电视,成为主要的视频信息来源,这样一来,给家里打电话这句俗语便有了全新的意义。
In his working-class back-story, there are drugs, drink and a feckless but funny bunch of buddies, a paraplegic brother, a three-legged dog, and a widowed father( Alec Baldwin) for whom tough love is a family tradition, not a catch phrase.
他来自一个工人家庭。他的生活中充斥着毒品和酒精。他有一群颓废但却有趣的弟兄,一个瘫痪的兄弟,一只瘸了一条腿的狗。他的父亲(阿历克·鲍德温饰)是个鳏夫,对待子女非常粗暴。在他看来,用这种方式去爱子女不是为了跟风,而是一种家庭的传统。
He was also inclined to literary realism in the several senses of that phrase.
他亦倾向于文学现实主义(literary realism)——是从该名词短语的若干层含意来理解的。
F95.2
Combined vocal and multiple motor tic disorder [de la Tourette]
A form of tic disorder in which there are, or have been, multiple motor tics and one or
more vocal tics, although these need not have occurred concurrently. The disorder usually
worsens during adolescence and tends to persist into adult life. The vocal tics are often
multiple with explosive repetitive vocalizations, throat-clearing, and grunting, and there
may be the use of obscene words or phrases. Sometimes there is associated gestural
echopraxia which may also be of an obscene nature (copropraxia) .
合并发声及多发动作抽搐症 ( 得拉土雷徵候群 )
是一种多种动作抽搐合并一种或多种的声音抽搐的
徵候群 , 这些抽搐不需要在同时发生。几乎总是在
儿童期或少年期发作。这种症状经常在少年期恶化
, 而且常会持续到成人期。声音抽搐常是多发性、
爆发性的重覆发声、清喉咙、发出哼声、并且可能
说出淫猥的字或片语。有时并有模仿动作 , 其可能
属猥亵行为性质 ( 秽亵行为 ) 。
F98.6
Cluttering
A rapid rate of speech with breakdown in fluency, but no repetitions or hesitations, of a
severity to give rise to diminished speech intelligibility. Speech is erratic and
dysrhythmic, with rapid jerky spurts that usually involve faulty phrasing patterns.
Excludes: stuttering (F98.5)
tic disorders (F95.-)
语言混杂失调症
说话的速度很快 , 但是断断续续 , 让人难以听懂 ,
但是不会重覆一些字词音节或踌躇中断。说话跳来
跳去 , 没有节奏 , 还有一些突然快速冒出的错误语
句型态喷出。
不包含 : 口吃 (98.5)
抽搐症 (F95.-)
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