hallucinate
hallucinate 英 [həˈlu:sɪneɪt] 美 [hə'lusɪneɪt]
vt. 使产生幻觉 vi. 出现幻觉
进行时:hallucinating 过去式:hallucinated 过去分词:hallucinated 第三人称单数:hallucinates 名词复数:hallucinates
- To hallucinate is to see or hear something that's not really there. If you hallucinate, it's a bit like dreaming while being awake.
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- vt. 使产生幻觉
- vi. 出现幻觉
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1. After being sleepless for more than 48 hours, I began to hallucinate.
在48个多小时未合眼后,我开始产生幻觉。
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2. Well into his stay in hospital, Hobson begins to hallucinate, an oft-reported side-effect of sleep deprivation
教授在医院呆了一段时间之后出现了幻觉。 这种现象是剥夺睡眠之后的常见副作用。
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3. It is this extra boost of cortisol which may link caffeine intake with an increased tendency to hallucinate, say the scientists.
科学家认为就是这些因咖啡因而额外产生的皮质醇增加了幻觉产生的机会。
- hallucinate (v.) "to have illusions," 1650s, from Latin alucinatus (later hallucinatus), past participle of alucinari "wander (in the mind), dream; talk unreasonably, ramble in thought," probably from Greek alyein, Attic halyein "wander in mind, be at a loss, be beside oneself (with grief, joy, perplexity), be distraught," also "wander about," which probably is related to alaomai "wander about" [Barnhart, Klein]. The Latin ending probably was influenced by vaticinari "to prophecy," also "to rave." Older in English in a rare and now obsolete transitive sense "deceive" (c. 1600); occasionally used 19c. in transitive sense "to cause hallucination." Related: Hallucinated; hallucinating.
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