| 释义 | 
		Definition of tizzy in English: tizzy(also tizz) nounPlural tizzies ˈtɪziˈtɪzi informal A state of nervous excitement or agitation. 〈非正式〉过度紧张;慌乱  he got into a tizzy and was talking absolute tosh 他陷入过度紧张状态,满口胡话。 Example sentencesExamples -  Count Thibault and his servant Andre are in a tizzy after being transported from the 12 th century to modern-day Chicago.
 -  So my husband Mark called me in a tizzy this morning.
 -  Meanwhile, The NY Times does a big story on liberal bloggers that apparently has the right blogosphere in a complete tizzy.
 -  They are working themselves into a complete tizzy over it.
 -  As a fierce penguin lover, I'm in a bit of a tizzy over this.
 -  While most capitals in the region are battening down the hatches against bird flu, a creature of another kind has sent Jakarta residents into a tizzy.
 -  Did the story's technological wrinkle throw the Times into a tizzy?
 -  The British Blogosphere is getting itself into a tizzy about the Red Army Fraction and the concept of ‘understanding terrorism’.
 -  The very idea that the government would want to treat access to bandwidth as even remotely analogous to access to highways has latter-day asphalt manufacturers in a tizzy.
 -  It is this last one that has me in a tizzy - how on earth does one ‘make’ your job a chore without totally losing it altogether?
 -  Wall Street is in a tizzy and Main Street is kind of tense.
 -  The country went into a tizzy when the official announcement of the visit was made and, it seemed at the time, every man, woman and child said they were going to see him.
 -  Consternation froths up into a fragrant tizz of sympathetic disapproval.
 -  India's textile industry is in a tizzy as new duties on bed linens and other textile products will hurt textile majors with considerable clout.
 -  A reader with a Ph.D. in Eastern European History writes in response to the recent tizzy over Martino.
 -  You know, it's time to throw out this archaic notion of age 30 as old or beginning middle age or whatever it is that gets people in such a tizzy.
 -  Oh yes, all the cognoscenti are clutching their pearls and the anti-choice groups are running their own ads and everybody's in a tizzy.
 -  With a mass of further celebrations to come, the community is in a tizzy of excitement.
 -  The two governments went into a tizzy of wheeling and dealing of a sort not seen since Texas oil millionaires found out about Saudi Arabia.
 -  Don't let them work you into a tizzy, let them stir their stupid pot.
 
 Synonyms commotion, uproar, outcry, disturbance, hubbub, hurly-burly, fuss, upset, tumult, brouhaha, palaver, to-do, pother, turmoil, tempest, agitation, pandemonium, confusion 
 Origin1930s (originally US): of unknown origin. Rhymesbusy, dizzy, fizzy, frizzy, Izzy, Lizzie    Definition of tizzy in US English: tizzynounˈtizēˈtɪzi informal A state of nervous excitement or agitation. 〈非正式〉过度紧张;慌乱  he got into a tizzy and was talking absolute nonsense 他陷入过度紧张状态,满口胡话。 Example sentencesExamples -  India's textile industry is in a tizzy as new duties on bed linens and other textile products will hurt textile majors with considerable clout.
 -  While most capitals in the region are battening down the hatches against bird flu, a creature of another kind has sent Jakarta residents into a tizzy.
 -  You know, it's time to throw out this archaic notion of age 30 as old or beginning middle age or whatever it is that gets people in such a tizzy.
 -  As a fierce penguin lover, I'm in a bit of a tizzy over this.
 -  A reader with a Ph.D. in Eastern European History writes in response to the recent tizzy over Martino.
 -  Consternation froths up into a fragrant tizz of sympathetic disapproval.
 -  Did the story's technological wrinkle throw the Times into a tizzy?
 -  Count Thibault and his servant Andre are in a tizzy after being transported from the 12 th century to modern-day Chicago.
 -  With a mass of further celebrations to come, the community is in a tizzy of excitement.
 -  It is this last one that has me in a tizzy - how on earth does one ‘make’ your job a chore without totally losing it altogether?
 -  The country went into a tizzy when the official announcement of the visit was made and, it seemed at the time, every man, woman and child said they were going to see him.
 -  Wall Street is in a tizzy and Main Street is kind of tense.
 -  So my husband Mark called me in a tizzy this morning.
 -  The British Blogosphere is getting itself into a tizzy about the Red Army Fraction and the concept of ‘understanding terrorism’.
 -  Meanwhile, The NY Times does a big story on liberal bloggers that apparently has the right blogosphere in a complete tizzy.
 -  The two governments went into a tizzy of wheeling and dealing of a sort not seen since Texas oil millionaires found out about Saudi Arabia.
 -  The very idea that the government would want to treat access to bandwidth as even remotely analogous to access to highways has latter-day asphalt manufacturers in a tizzy.
 -  Don't let them work you into a tizzy, let them stir their stupid pot.
 -  Oh yes, all the cognoscenti are clutching their pearls and the anti-choice groups are running their own ads and everybody's in a tizzy.
 -  They are working themselves into a complete tizzy over it.
 
 Synonyms commotion, uproar, outcry, disturbance, hubbub, hurly-burly, fuss, upset, tumult, brouhaha, palaver, to-do, pother, turmoil, tempest, agitation, pandemonium, confusion 
 Origin1930s (originally US): of unknown origin.     |