scribbler

英 [ˈskrɪblə(r)] 美 [ˈskrɪblər]

n.  耍笔杆子的; (尤指供在校儿童用的)练习本,习字本

复数:scribblers

BNC.35406 / COCA.32810



牛津词典

noun

  1. 耍笔杆子的
    a journalist, author or other writer
    1. (尤指供在校儿童用的)练习本,习字本
      a book with plain paper for writing in, especially for children at school

      柯林斯词典

      1. N-COUNT 蹩脚文人;三流作家
        People sometimes refer to writers as scribblers when they think they are not very good writers.
        1. The world is full of scribblers. I don't intend to join their ranks.
          这个世上净是些蹩脚文人。我不想与他们为伍。

      双语例句

      1. The world is full of scribblers. I don't intend to join their ranks.
        这个世上净是些蹩脚文人。我不想与他们为伍。
      2. By the end of the second world war, Lord Keynes of Tilton was no mere academic scribbler but a policy-maker, in a debate dominated by second-hand versions of ideas he had put into circulation in a previous life.
        到了二战结束时,在一次由他早年发表的旧思想占主导地位的辩论中,身为提尔顿男爵的凯恩斯已不再是一位三流学者,而成为了一位政策制定者。
      3. Wang Yuan-liang is patriotic in the Southern Song Dynasty, also as the dual identity of palace stringed-instrument player and hired scribbler, experience room Song is it to historical changes that fall, live a life first period also under not ruling Yuan Dynasty to decline.
        南宋爱国遗民汪元量,身兼宫廷琴师和御用文人的双重身份,亲身经历了宋室由衰落到覆亡的历史变迁,在元朝统治下亦生活了一段时期。

      英英释义

      noun

      1. a writer whose handwriting is careless and hard to read

          Synonym:    scrawler

        1. informal terms for journalists

            Synonym:    scribepenman