Fear the fearsome fury of the forest crane! 翻译:为森林之鹤可怕的愤怒而恐惧吧!
fearsome
[ adj ] causing fear or dread or terror <adj.all> the awful waran awful risk dire news a career or vengeance so direful that London was shocked the dread presence of the headmaster polio is no longer the dreaded disease it once was a dreadful storm a fearful howling horrendous explosions shook the city a terrible curse
Fearsome \Fear"some\ (f[=e]r"s[u^]m) a. 1. Frightful; causing fear. [Scotch] ``This fearsome wind.'' --Sir W. Scott
The forward linemen lock arms and heads in a fearsome drive to resume play.
He also disputes his fearsome reputation.
"What we are seeing is the beginning of a monster." How fearsome it becomes depends on how deeply the housing recession bites.
Sailing vessels were wrecked along here by the hundreds, and the Cornish population developed as fearsome a reputation for 'wrecking' as for smuggling.
Gang crime is fearsome, despite a law-and-order regime the Governor has continued.
And it is for shallow flats like these that the Exumas are famed because they are home to bonefish, which are known to be fearsome fight-ers. Flushed fishermen were telling ecstatic tales in the bar at the Peace and Plenty Inn when I arrived.
The economy that has resulted from fearsome levies is one where the entire income-tax revenue now goes to servicing the national debt.
Its European sales could fall by 340,000 units this year. VW's new chief executive, Mr Ferdinand Piech, has signalled a fearsome intent to tackle VW's problems head-on.
It fled shamelessly at the appearance of a fearsome tiger heron.
On the secluded campus where the Communist secret police once learned their fearsome skills, music, science and languages are taught to an ordinary student body.
Officials say little physical force is needed because the guerrillas control through their fearsome reputation and by denying the refugees all contact with the outside world.
By reputation, at least among pundits, it's one of the world's most fearsome fighting forces.
The videotape evidence was hard to ignore, and the city's white establishment, including the Post's fickle editorialists, turned against him with fearsome brutality.
For those with loved ones in hiding, such a prospect was especially fearsome.
It was an otherworldly setting to play out fearsome possibilities.
For despite his fearsome reputation, he had neither Mr. Milken's market acumen nor his access to funds.