英 [ˈhʌlkɪŋ] 美 [ˈhʌlkɪŋ]
adj. 笨重的;粗陋的
hulking /ˈhʌlkɪŋ/ TEM8
形容词 You use hulking to describe a person or object that is extremely large, heavy, or slow-moving, especially when they seem threatening in some way. 庞大而笨重的
When I woke up there was a hulking figure staring down at me.
我醒来时,有个巨形身影正低头盯着我看。
囚船,监狱船
... hulk n.废船,笨重之人或物 hulking adj.笨重的 hull n.外壳,荚,船身 ...
... humph哼 hulking宏扔躯样 hopeless府盼略 ...
... hemline n. 下摆 hulking* adj. 高大的 incessant* adj. 不停的 ...
相比之下,更有趣的是,谷歌的员工在一个巨大的数据海洋里工作,CNET将其称为“hulking(绿巨人)”。
笨重的;粗陋的
I don't want that hulking great computer in my office.
我不要把那台又笨又大的计算机放在我的办公室。
When I woke up there was a hulking figure staring down at me.
我醒来时,有个巨形身影正低头盯着我看。
Most telling was the 62% fall in sales of Hummers, GM's hulking military-style SUVs.
降幅更大的有通用体型笨重的军用型SUV悍马,销量下挫62%。
Standing outside the Pentagon Monday in front of one of the hulking desert sand colored new vehicles designed to protect against those bombs, Assistant Secretary Carter extolled the M-ATV's virtues.
VOA : standard.2009.11.02
Then a few more, and a few more, until about eight great hulking forms are skulking and prowling nearby.
The hulking Churchill Downs with its famous twin spires is still imposing, but is showing its age.
But in those days, computers were hulking mainframes and there were far fewer of them tethered together.