2013年7月29日 星期一

nigh, well-nigh, apocalyptic, term of office

Despite calling Brown's term as prime minister a "disaster," Blair said preventing Brown's ascension to the office was "well-nigh impossible."

On March 31, 1968, President Johnson stunned the country by announcing he would not run for another term of office.

a well-nigh apocalyptic vision,
after all nigh

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Google's driverless car has been approved for a license, the first of its kind issued, to be tested on the roads of Nevada. Terminator fans rejoice: The machines are winning, and Judgment Day draws nigh. Maybe not quite yet, but Nevada took the nation ...


apocalyptic

Pronunciation: /əpɒkəˈlɪptɪk/
Translate apocalyptic | into Italian


adjective

  • describing or prophesying the complete destruction of the world:the apocalyptic visions of ecologists
  • momentous or catastrophic:the struggle between the two countries is assuming apocalyptic proportions
  • of or resembling the biblical Apocalypse:apocalyptic imagery



Derivatives





apocalyptically

adverb

Origin:

early 17th century (as a noun denoting the writer of the Apocalypse, St John): from Greek apokaluptikos, from apokaluptein 'uncover' (see apocalypse)




nigh

Pronunciation: /nʌɪ/


adverb , preposition , & adjective

  • 1 archaic or literary near: [as adjective]:the end is nigh [as adverb]:they drew nigh unto the city
  • 2almost: [as adverb]:a car weighing nigh on two tons

Origin:

Old English nēh, nēah, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch na, German nah. Compare with near

well-nigh
(wĕl'')
adv.
Nearly; almost.

(of actions or states) slightly short of or not quite accomplished; `near' is sometimes used informally for `nearly' and `most' is sometimes used informally for `almost'
Synonyms: about, just about, almost, most, all but, nearly, near, nigh, virtually

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