chill
chill 英 [tʃɪl] 美 [tʃɪl]
n. 寒冷;寒意;寒心 adj. 寒冷的;冷漠的;扫兴的 vt. 冷冻,冷藏;使寒心;使感到冷
进行时:chilling 过去式:chilled 过去分词:chilled 第三人称单数:chills 名词复数:chills
- A sharp burst of cold air or icy temperatures is a chill. The chill of a January day in New England might make you dream of moving to New Mexico.
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- n. 寒冷;寒意;寒心
- adj. 寒冷的;冷漠的;扫兴的
- vt. 冷冻,冷藏;使寒心;使感到冷
- vi. 冷藏;变冷
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1. I felt a chill creep over me.
我感到周身发冷。
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2. The sight sends a chill to my heart.
那情景使我心寒。
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3. It's spring but there's still a chill in the air.
初春季节仍有寒意。
- chill (n.) Old English ciele, cele "cold, coolness, chill, frost, sensation of suffering from cold, sensation of cold experienced in illness," from Proto-Germanic *kal- "to be cold," from PIE root *gel- "cold; to freeze." In modern use perhaps a back-formation from the verb. Figurative sense "depressing situation or influence" is from 1821 (in Middle English the figurative sense was "suffering, misfortune").
- chill (v.) late 14c., intransitive, "to feel cold, grow cold;" c. 1400, transitive, "to make cold," from chill (n.). Related: Chilled; chilling; chillingly. Figurative use "discourage, dispirit" is from late 14c. Meaning "hang out" first recorded 1985; from earlier chill out "relax" (1979).
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