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Murphy Meaning in English

word

/ˈmɝfi/
MUR-fee
/mˈɜːfi/
MUR-fee

释义

Usually used in the expression 'Murphy's law,' the idea that if something can go wrong, it probably will, especially at the worst possible time. It is often said jokingly when a series of small problems happens.

用法与细微差别

Rarely used alone; almost always appears as 'Murphy's law'. It's informal and cultural rather than scientific. People use it to comment on bad luck, inconvenience, or annoying timing, not for serious technical explanation.

例句

If anything can break during the move, it will—total Murphy moment.

natural

My phone died right before the call—classic Murphy.

basic

We forgot the tickets at home. Murphy's law.

basic

It started raining on our picnic day—Murphy's law again.

basic

Of course the printer jams five minutes before the meeting. Murphy's law, right?

natural

Every time I'm already late, traffic gets worse—thanks, Murphy.

natural