unreliable
unreliable — 形容詞
1. If a person or thing is unreliable, you cannot trust or depend on them to do wha
不可靠的
無法信任或依賴的
If a person or thing is unreliable, you cannot trust or depend on them to do what is expected — for example, a friend who never keeps promises, a car that breaks down often, or a news website that publishes false stories.
Sofia's old car was so unreliable that she had to take the bus to work every day.
Sofia 的老車太不可靠了,她只好每天搭公車上班。
so + adjective + that-clause showing result
The news report came from an unreliable website full of made-up facts.
那則新聞報導來自一個充滿捏造事實的不可靠網站。
unreliable + noun (source, website, data)
Arjun is a wonderful musician but too unreliable to lead the school band.
Arjun 是很棒的音樂人,但他太不可靠了,沒辦法領導學校樂團。
Yael found the internet connection unreliable during the video call.
Yael 發現視訊通話期間網路連線不穩定。
An unreliable witness can destroy a whole case if the lawyers are not careful.
不可靠的證人如果律師不夠謹慎,可能會毀掉整起案件。
- undependable
stronger synonym for people and machines; more common in American English
- untrustworthy
focuses on honesty rather than performance; used for people and information, not machines
- unpredictable
broader — includes wildly varying behaviour beyond just failure; neutral or positive in some contexts ('an unpredictable plot')
- reliable
the direct opposite
- dependable
emphasises consistent good performance
- trustworthy
emphasises honesty and truthfulness
用法筆記
Commonly applied to people (friends, workers, sources), machines (cars, computers), and information (data, news, studies). Can describe a temporary state ('The internet is unreliable today') or a fixed character trait ('He is an unreliable person').