banish
banish 英 [ˈbænɪʃ] 美 [ˈbænɪʃ]
vt. 放逐;驱逐
进行时:banishing 过去式:banished 过去分词:banished 第三人称单数:banishes 名词复数:banishes
- To banish is to get rid of. Think very carefully before you banish someone from your group. Someday, you may want that person around again.
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- vt. 放逐;驱逐
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1. To banish worry, doubt, and fear, to love and laugh and give!
让我们驱逐忧虑,疑惑和恐惧,全身心地去爱,去欢笑和给予!
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2. Urbandictionary also contains the definition “to shun one away from the rest of a group” which does line up with Merriam Webster which says “to banish from society, to cast out, to exile.
《城市词典》对这个词还有另一个定义,即“(让)某人回避其所在的那一个群体”。 这个解释与《韦氏词典》中的解释不谋而合,“(将某人)驱逐出社会,放逐(某人),流放(某人)”。
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3. In the lab, psychologists have people try to banish a thought from their minds — of a white bear, for example — and find that the thought keeps returning, about once a minute.
心理学家在实验室中要求人们试着从思想里摒除某个念头——例如,一头白熊——而后发现这个念头会大约每隔一分钟返回一次。
- banish (v.) late 14c., banischen, "to condemn (someone) by proclamation or edict to leave the country, to outlaw by political or judicial authority," from banniss-, extended stem of Old French banir "announce, proclaim; levy; forbid; banish, proclaim an outlaw" (12c., Modern French bannir), from a Germanic source (perhaps Frankish *bannjan "to order or prohibit under penalty"), from Proto-Germanic *bannan (see ban (v.)). The French word might be by way of Medieval Latin bannire, also from Germanic (compare bandit). The general sense of "send or drive away, expel" is from c. 1400. Related: Banished; banishing.
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