ubiquitous

形容词 adj.
/juːˈbɪkwɪtəs/|/juːˈbɪkwətəs/    /juˈbɪkwɪtəs/|[juˈbɪkwɪɾəs]|/juˈbɪkwətəs/|[juˈbɪkwəɾəs]|/jʉːˈbɪkwɪtəs/|[jʉːˈbɪkwɪɾəs]

英文释义

形容词 adj.
  1. Being everywhere at once: omnipresent. not-comparable
    — In Christianity, Hinduism, and Judaism, God is ubiquitous.
  2. Appearing to be everywhere at once; being or seeming to be in more than one location at the same time. not-comparable
    — One of the wild suggestions referred to, as at last coming to be linked with the White Whale in the minds of the superstitiously inclined, was the unearthly conceit that Moby Dick was ubiquitous; that he had actually been encountered in opposite latitudes at one and the same instant of time.
  3. Widespread; very prevalent. not-comparable

词源

From ubiquity + -ous, from Medieval Latin ubīquitās, from Latin ubīque (“everywhere”), from ubī̆ (“where”) + -que (“each, ever”). Compare ubiety.
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