anger
anger 英 [ˈæŋgə(r)] 美 [ˈæŋɡɚ]
n. 怒,愤怒 v. 发怒,恼火;激怒
进行时:angering 过去式:angered 过去分词:angered 第三人称单数:angers 名词复数:angers
- If you’re mad about something and you’re not going to take it anymore, you’re feeling anger, a strong emotion you experience when you think someone has done you wrong. If you want to scream and kick, you’re feeling anger.
- 请先登录
- n. 怒,愤怒
- v. 发怒,恼火;激怒
-
1. Jan slammed her fist on the desk in anger.
简气愤地捶打桌子。
-
2. He was filled with anger at the way he had been treated.
他因遭受如此待遇而怒火满腔。
-
3. The question clearly angered him.
这个问题显然激怒了他。
- anger (n.) mid-13c., "hostile attitude, ill will, surliness" (also "distress, suffering; anguish, agony," a sense now obsolete), from Old Norse angr "distress, grief, sorrow, affliction," from Proto-Germanic *angaz (from PIE root *angh- "tight, painfully constricted, painful"). Cognate with German Angst. Sense of "rage, wrath" is early 14c. Old Norse also had angr-gapi "rash, foolish person;" angr-lauss "free from care;" angr-lyndi "sadness, low spirits."
- anger (v.) c. 1200, "to irritate, annoy, provoke," from Old Norse angra "to grieve, vex, distress; to be vexed at, take offense with," from Proto-Germanic *angaz (source also of Old English enge "narrow, painful," Middle Dutch enghe, Gothic aggwus "narrow"), from PIE *anghos, suffixed form of root *angh- "tight, painfully constricted, painful."
- 请先登录
0 个回复