extravagant: [14] An extravagant person is literally one who ‘wanders out of’ the proper course. The word comes from the present participle of medieval Latin extrāvagārī, a compound formed from the prefix extrā- ‘outside’ and vagārī ‘wander’ (source of English vagabond, vagary, and vagrant), which seems originally to have been used adjectivally with reference to certain uncodified or ‘stray’ papal decrees. This was the word’s original application in English, and the present-day meanings ‘wildly excessive’ and ‘spending too lavishly’ did not really establish themselves before the early 18th century. => vagabond, vagary, vagrant
extravagant (adj.)
late 14c., from Medieval Latin extravagantem (nominative extravagans), originally a word in Canon Law for uncodified papal decrees, present participle of extravagari "wander outside or beyond," from Latin extra "outside of" (see extra-) + vagari "wander, roam" (see vague). Extended sense of "excessive, extreme, exceeding reasonable limits" first recorded 1590s, probably via French; that of "wasteful, lavish, exceeding prudence in expenditure" is from 1711. Related: Extravagantly. Wordsworth ("Prelude") used extravagate (v.).
1. I can have a brainstorm and be very extravagant.
我有时会头脑发热,挥霍无度。
来自柯林斯例句
2. Who is footing the bill for her extravagant holiday?
谁会为她奢侈的假日买单?
来自柯林斯例句
3. The coronation was an occasion for extravagant myth and sentiment.
加冕典礼是极尽奢华和怀旧的仪式。
来自柯林斯例句
4. Her Aunt Sallie gave her an uncharacteristically extravagant gift.
萨莉姨妈送给她一件贵得离谱的礼物。
来自柯林斯例句
5. Don't be afraid to consider apparently extravagant ideas.
extravagant: [14] An extravagant person is literally one who ‘wanders out of’ the proper course. The word comes from the present participle of medieval Latin extrāvagārī, a compound formed from the prefix extrā- ‘outside’ and vagārī ‘wander’ (source of English vagabond, vagary, and vagrant), which seems originally to have been used adjectivally with reference to certain uncodified or ‘stray’ papal decrees. This was the word’s original application in English, and the present-day meanings ‘wildly excessive’ and ‘spending too lavishly’ did not really establish themselves before the early 18th century. => vagabond, vagary, vagrant
extravagant (adj.)
late 14c., from Medieval Latin extravagantem (nominative extravagans), originally a word in Canon Law for uncodified papal decrees, present participle of extravagari "wander outside or beyond," from Latin extra "outside of" (see extra-) + vagari "wander, roam" (see vague). Extended sense of "excessive, extreme, exceeding reasonable limits" first recorded 1590s, probably via French; that of "wasteful, lavish, exceeding prudence in expenditure" is from 1711. Related: Extravagantly. Wordsworth ("Prelude") used extravagate (v.).
双语例句
1. I can have a brainstorm and be very extravagant.
我有时会头脑发热,挥霍无度。
来自柯林斯例句
2. Who is footing the bill for her extravagant holiday?
谁会为她奢侈的假日买单?
来自柯林斯例句
3. The coronation was an occasion for extravagant myth and sentiment.
加冕典礼是极尽奢华和怀旧的仪式。
来自柯林斯例句
4. Her Aunt Sallie gave her an uncharacteristically extravagant gift.
萨莉姨妈送给她一件贵得离谱的礼物。
来自柯林斯例句
5. Don't be afraid to consider apparently extravagant ideas.