例句 |
inactiveadjective slow to move or actit's easiest to catch snakes early in the morning, while they're still cold and inactive dull, inert, lethargic, quiescent, sleepy, sluggish, torpid ambitionless, apathetic, indolent, languorous, lazy, lazyish, listless, shiftless, slack, slothful, sluggard, sluggardlydormant, inanimate, motionless, resting, sedentary, static, stilldeaddopey(also dopy), druggedasleep, drowsy, somnambulantcatatonic, comatose active busy, engaged, occupied, workinganimated, bouncing, dynamic, energetic, kinetic, lively, peppy, perky, spirited, sprightly, springy, vigorous, vital, vivacious, zippyassiduous, diligent, hardworking, industrious, sedulous not being in a state of use, activity, or employmentan inactive oil well dead, dormant, fallow, free, idle, inert, inoperative, latent, off, unused, vacant abeyant, arrested, interrupted, suspendedunoccupiedasleep, comatose, lifeless, moribund, quiescent, sleepyinoperable, unusable, unworkable, uselessdull, slow at rest, on the shelf, out of commission active, alive, busy, employed, functioning, going, living, on, operating, operative, running, working functional, operable, operational, workableassiduous, industrious, sedulousenergetic, vigorousfeasible, practical, usable(also useable), useful, viable inactive, idle, inert, passive, supine mean not engaged in work or activity.inactive applies to anyone or anything not in action or in operation or at work.on inactive status as an astronaut inactive accounts idle applies to persons that are not busy or occupied or to their powers or their implements.workers were idle in the fields inert as applied to things implies powerlessness to move or to affect other things; as applied to persons it suggests an inherent or habitual indisposition to activity.inert ingredients in drugs an inert citizenry passive implies immobility or lack of normally expected response to an external force or influence and often suggests deliberate submissiveness or self-control.passive resistance supine applies only to persons and commonly implies abjectness or indolence.a supine willingness to play the fool in 1664 |