nice
初中,高中,GRE,1
英[naɪs]
|美[naɪs]
adj.美好的,愉快的;正派的;友好的,亲切的;细致的
日语:ニース
法语:bon
德语:Hübsch
韩语:멋진
俄语:lindo
牛津词典
adj.
令人愉快;吸引人 pleasant/attractive
- 令人愉快的;宜人的;吸引人的
pleasant, enjoyable or attractive
- a nice day/smile/place
舒适的一天;舒心的微笑;宜人的地方 - nice weather
好天气 - Did you have a nice time ?
你玩得痛快吗? - You look very nice.
你很好看。 - ‘Do you want to come, too?’ ‘Yes, that would be nice .’
“你也想来吗?”“是啊,很高兴来。” - The nicest thing about her is that she never criticizes us.
她最大的好处就是从不批评我们。 - Nice to meet you! (= a friendly greeting when you meet sb for the first time)
很高兴见到你! - It's been nice meeting you .
这次见到你真高兴。 - It's nice that you can come with us.
你能和我们一起去真是太好了。 - It would be nice if he moved to London.
他要是搬到伦敦就好了。 - It's nice to know that somebody appreciates what I do.
知道有人欣赏我所做的事真让人开心。 - We all had the flu last week─it wasn't very nice.
真不走运——上周我们都得了流感。
- (用于形容词或副词前以加强语气)
used before adjectives or adverbs to emphasize how pleasant sth is
- a nice hot bath
舒舒服服的热水浴 - a nice long walk
长时间很愉快的散步 - It was nice and warm yesterday.
昨天的天气暖洋洋的。 - Everyone arrived nice and early.
大家都早早地到了。
好心;友好 kind/friendly
- 好心的;和蔼的;友好的
kind; friendly
- Our new neighbours are very nice.
我们的新邻居很和气。 - He's a really nice guy.
他真是个好人。 - Be nice to me. I'm not feeling well.
我有点不舒服,对我好点。 - It was nice of them to invite us.
他们真好,邀请了我们。 - I complained to the manager and he was very nice about it.
我向经理发牢骚,他很宽容。 - I asked him in the nicest possible way to put his cigarette out.
我尽量客气地请他把香烟掐了。
不好 not nice
- 坏的;令人不愉快的
bad or unpleasant
- That's a nice thing to say!
这种话也说得出口! - That's a nice way to speak to your mother!
你竟然对你母亲这么说话!
细节 small details
- 细微的;精细的
involving a very small detail or difference
- a nice point of law (= one that is difficult to decide)
法律上难以决断之处
网络解释
adj. 精密的;美好的;细微的;和蔼的
n. (Nice)人名;(英)尼斯
词形变化
形容词比较级:nicer 形容词最高级:nicest
中文词源
nice 美好的,愉快的,细致的
来自法语nice,笨的,傻的,来自拉丁语nescius,无知的,ne-,无,没有,-sci,知识,知道,词源同science.后来词义反转的赋予了诸多褒义色彩。比较silly.
双语例句
- What I'd do if I were you is be nice to him
如果我是你,我要做的就是对他好。
- He's generous and, you know, very nice, very polite
他很大方而且,你知道,很友善,很有礼貌。
- I have to leave. Nice to have met you.
我得走了。认识您很高兴。
- It was nice talking to you, Miss Giroux
吉鲁小姐,和您谈话很愉快。
- I think silk ties can be quite nice
我认为丝绸领带相当不错。
- It's nice to be here together again
又在这儿相聚太好了。
- We had a nice meal with a bottle of champagne.
我们美餐了一顿,还喝了一瓶香槟。
- It's awfully nice of you to come all this way to see me
你真是太好了,大老远来看我。
- 'How are your boys?' — 'How nice of you to ask.'
“你的几个儿子好么?”——“谢谢关心。”
- This has been so nice, so terribly kind of you.
这太好了,你真是太体贴了。
- I've met your father and he's rather nice
我已经见过你爸爸了,他非常和蔼可亲。
- He was a nice fellow, very quiet and courteous.
他是个好小伙,非常温和,彬彬有礼。
- She met Mr and Mrs Ricciardi, who were very nice to her.
她见到了里恰尔迪夫妇,他们对她非常友好。
- He nodded to us and said, 'Nice weather we're having.'
他冲我们点点头,说道:“天气真不错。”
- With a nice dark colour, the wine is medium to full bodied
这种葡萄酒色泽深暗悦目,是中等浓郁至浓香型的。
- People have got used to nice glossy magazines
人们已经习惯了用精美的亮光纸印刷的杂志了。
- Add the oats to thicken the mixture and stir until it is nice and creamy
加上燕麦让混合料变稠,然后搅拌成奶油状。
- I'll explain it nice and simply so you can understand.
我会清楚简单地进行解释,以便能让你们明白。
- Those are nice academic arguments, but what about the immediate future?
那些是微妙的学术上的辩论,但不久的将来怎么办?
- Good morning. Nice to meet you and thanks for being with us this weekend
早上好!见到你真高兴,感谢你和我们共度这个周末。
- 'It's so nice to see you,' said Charles.
查尔斯说:“见到你真是太高兴了。”
- Knowles became Torquay's manager. Nice one.
诺尔斯成了托奇酒店的经理,干得很棒。
- All I want is to have some peace and quiet and spend a couple of nice days with my grandchildren
我就想清静一下,和孙子孙女们一起好好呆几天。
- It would be nice to have someone who really understood me, a friend
要是有个真正理解我的人、有个朋友就好了。
- You look like a nice upstanding young man.
你看起来像是一个正直的好青年。
- Nice work, Matthew. I knew you could do it.
干得好,马修。我知道你能行。
- It's been very nice to prove them wrong.
非常高兴能证明他们错了。
- Oh, what a nice little girl she is!
啊,这是一个多么好的小姑娘!
- It's nice of you to help him.
你帮他的忙,真太好了。
- This apple is very nice.
这个苹果很好吃。
语源
Middle English (in the sense stupid): from Old French, from Latin nesciusignorant, from nescirenot know. Other early senses included coy, reserved, giving rise to fastidious, scrupulous: this led both to the sense fine, subtle (regarded by some as the ‘correct’ sense), and to the main current senses