grotesque
adj. 怪誕的,荒誕不經的; 奇形怪狀的
n. 奇形怪狀的東西; 奇異風格
You say that something is grotesque when it is so unnatural, unpleasant, and exaggerated that it upsets or shocks you.
...the grotesque disparities between the wealthy few and nearly everyone else.
少數富人與幾乎所有其他人之間懸殊的貧富差距
...a country where grotesque abuses are taking place.
發生駭人聽聞的虐待事件的國家
If someone or something is grotesque, they are very ugly.
They tried to avoid looking at his grotesque face and his crippled body.
他們儘量不去看他那張奇醜無比的臉和殘疾的身體。
A grotesque is a person who is very ugly in a strange or unnatural way, especially one in a novel or painting.
Grass's novels are peopled with outlandish characters: grotesques, clowns, scarecrows, dwarfs.
格拉斯的小說裡充斥著稀奇古怪的人物:醜陋的怪人、小丑、稻草人和侏儒。
1. art characterized by an incongruous mixture of parts of humans and animals interwoven with plants
1. distorted and unnatural in shape or size; abnormal and hideous;
2. ludicrously odd;
The uninhibited mutations and grotesque symbolic language of dreams interrupt the distinct images of contemporary humanity.
現代人的鮮明形象中又穿插了夢境的自由變化和怪誕的象徵語言.
This elevation was ornamented from space to space with huge grotesque figures of animals.
這片高地每隔一段距離便有一尊怪獸的巨像作為點綴.
Everything seemed strange, so tawdry and grotesque.
一切似乎都很新奇, 很花哨,而且滑稽可笑.
These Clausewtzian commonplaces will shed light on the grotesque fiasco at Leyte Gulf.
克勞塞維茨這幾句平易淺顯的話,可以說明萊特灣那一次近似荒唐的失敗原因.
The fat old man looked grotesque in his tight pants.
那胖老頭穿著緊身褲顯得很可笑.