| 释义 | 
		Definition of dumbed-down in English: dumbed-downadjective informal Simplified so as to be intellectually undemanding and accessible to a wide audience.  the dumbed-down nature of modern politics Example sentencesExamples -  Celebrities have become the heroes of our dumbed-down age.
 -  It brings to mind other wartime nostalgia films like Life is Beautiful, except without the mawkishness that ruins those dumbed-down crowd-pleasers.
 -  This, surely, must be the ultimate in dumbed-down TV.
 -  The humour is so crass, to call it dumbed-down would be expansive.
 -  It was dumbed-down government at its most inane.
 -  Do we have to put up with dumbed-down remakes of ideas from the past?
 -  It's still funnier and more interesting than most insultingly dumbed-down comedies.
 -  The movie celebrates the pleasures of conversation, a quality that's been denigrated over the last few dumbed-down decades of American film.
 -  If only cinema had more directors like him, particularly in this age of corporate, dumbed-down, market led "Event" movies.
 -  Stung by earlier accusations that they are producing dumbed-down pseudo-science, the producers of Walking with Cavemen took pains to include serious scientists to make this program appear legitimate.
 -  It's a tepid, dumbed-down attempt at making Othello palatable for young audiences.
 -  This is a serious comic novel, a withering satire on dumbed-down culture, a gently ironic look at devotions and ambitions, and a redemptive parable about coping with grief.
 -  For die-hard classical fans, "accessible" can really mean "dumbed-down", so when that's how someone bills themselves, alarm bells start ringing.
 -  The back cover is where it breaks down, with Day-Glo images, dumbed-down text, and an overall less sophisticated feel.
 -  Considering that this is a television series, which usually indicates dumbed-down plots, the intricacy and darkness are both welcome and surprising.
 -  The problem today is not dumbed-down entertainment programmes, but the broader failure to promote intellectual and artistic standards.
 -  Is it the real deal or just a dumbed-down lurch towards the lowbrow?
 -  A lot of people think you can reach this community by delivering a dumbed-down, unbranded product.
 -  To stifle opposition from big-money clients, some firms may give individual investors shorter, dumbed-down reports that get straight to the point.
 -  On the proposed move of the Nine O'Clock News to 10 pm, he also hit back at the critics who fear that the proposed change will mean a dumbed-down BBC1.
 
 Synonyms mass-market, tabloid, pop, popular, intellectually undemanding, lightweight, easy to understand, accessible, unpretentious, simple, simplistic    Definition of dumbed-down in US English: dumbed-downadjective informal Simplified so as to be intellectually undemanding and accessible to a wide audience.  the dumbed-down nature of modern politics Example sentencesExamples -  It's a tepid, dumbed-down attempt at making Othello palatable for young audiences.
 -  Celebrities have become the heroes of our dumbed-down age.
 -  Stung by earlier accusations that they are producing dumbed-down pseudo-science, the producers of Walking with Cavemen took pains to include serious scientists to make this program appear legitimate.
 -  Considering that this is a television series, which usually indicates dumbed-down plots, the intricacy and darkness are both welcome and surprising.
 -  The back cover is where it breaks down, with Day-Glo images, dumbed-down text, and an overall less sophisticated feel.
 -  To stifle opposition from big-money clients, some firms may give individual investors shorter, dumbed-down reports that get straight to the point.
 -  Do we have to put up with dumbed-down remakes of ideas from the past?
 -  The problem today is not dumbed-down entertainment programmes, but the broader failure to promote intellectual and artistic standards.
 -  For die-hard classical fans, "accessible" can really mean "dumbed-down", so when that's how someone bills themselves, alarm bells start ringing.
 -  This is a serious comic novel, a withering satire on dumbed-down culture, a gently ironic look at devotions and ambitions, and a redemptive parable about coping with grief.
 -  Is it the real deal or just a dumbed-down lurch towards the lowbrow?
 -  The humour is so crass, to call it dumbed-down would be expansive.
 -  It was dumbed-down government at its most inane.
 -  If only cinema had more directors like him, particularly in this age of corporate, dumbed-down, market led "Event" movies.
 -  It brings to mind other wartime nostalgia films like Life is Beautiful, except without the mawkishness that ruins those dumbed-down crowd-pleasers.
 -  A lot of people think you can reach this community by delivering a dumbed-down, unbranded product.
 -  It's still funnier and more interesting than most insultingly dumbed-down comedies.
 -  This, surely, must be the ultimate in dumbed-down TV.
 -  On the proposed move of the Nine O'Clock News to 10 pm, he also hit back at the critics who fear that the proposed change will mean a dumbed-down BBC1.
 -  The movie celebrates the pleasures of conversation, a quality that's been denigrated over the last few dumbed-down decades of American film.
 
 Synonyms mass-market, tabloid, pop, popular, intellectually undemanding, lightweight, easy to understand, accessible, unpretentious, simple, simplistic     |