furore
furore 英 [fjuˈrɔ:ri] 美 [ˈfjʊrɔri]
n. 勃然大怒;公众的骚动;狂热
名词复数:furores
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- n. 勃然大怒;公众的骚动;狂热
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1. China's science popularisation law gives teeth to those fighting 'pseudoscience' — but also feeds the furore over what the term really means, report Jia Hepeng and Li Jiao.
贾鹤鹏和李娇报道了中国的科普法让那些对付 "伪科学" 的人更加有力,但是也让人们狂热地争辩这个术语真实的意味。
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2. A furore over the parade -- which has been held for the last several years in New Zealand's largest city -- brought out the biggest crowds ever for the spectacle.
过去几年,人们对这个在新西兰最大城市举行的游行一直很狂热。而今年的游行引来的围观者是这几年来最多的。
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3. Summers, of course, was forced to resign in 2006 after his public endorsement of this view caused a furore.
当然,在公开这个他认可的观点并引起了一阵狂热后2006年被强迫辞退。
- furore (n.) 1790, Italian form of furor, borrowed into English originally in the sense "enthusiastic popular admiration;" it later descended to mean the same thing as furor and lost its usefulness.
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