Ado Meaning in English
word
/əˈdu/
uh-DOO
/ɐdˈuː/
uh-DOO
释义
Ado means a lot of busy activity, noise, or excitement, usually more than is necessary or justified.
用法与细微差别
‘Ado’ is formal and mostly used in fixed phrases like 'much ado about nothing.' Rare in everyday conversation. It often implies unnecessary fuss, especially when things are exaggerated.
Spanish: alboroto - jaleo - líoPortuguese (BR): alvoroço - confusão - barulhoPortuguese (PT): alvoroço - confusão - barulhoChinese (Simplified): 大惊小怪 - 忙乱 - 喧闹Chinese (Traditional): 大驚小怪 - 忙亂 - 喧鬧Hindi: शोर-शराबा - हंगामाArabic: ضجة - جلبةBengali: হইচই - বাগাড়ম্বরRussian: суматоха - суетаJapanese: 大騒ぎ - 騒動Vietnamese: ồn ào - huyên náoKorean: 야단법석 - 소란Turkish: yaygara - tantanaUrdu: ہنگامہ - شور شراباIndonesian: keributan - kehebohan
例句
All this ado over one small problem seems silly.
basic
Without further ado, let's start the meeting.
basic
He made a lot of ado about the lost keys.
basic
There was so much ado at the party that I couldn’t even hear myself think.
natural
After all that ado, the event was actually very simple.
natural
It was much ado about nothing—there was no real issue to worry about.
natural