slouch
slouch 英 [slaʊtʃ] 美 [slaʊtʃ]
n. 下垂;笨拙的人,懒散的人;懒散的样子 vi. 没精打采地站;耷拉 vt. 使下垂
进行时:slouching 过去式:slouched 过去分词:slouched 第三人称单数:slouches 名词复数:slouches
- To slouch is to sit or stand with your shoulders hunched. Most people are more likely to slouch when they're tired or bored.
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- n. 下垂;笨拙的人,懒散的人;懒散的样子
- vi. 没精打采地站;耷拉
- vt. 使下垂
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1. If you slouch, cross your legs, or look weak, it works against you.
如果你没精打采,交叉双腿,看上去很虚弱,那么结果就对你不利。
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2. The reverse is also true. If you slouch, cross your legs, or look weak, it works against you. Sitting powerfully for just two minutes can make a psychological difference.
反之亦如此。如果你没精打采,交叉双腿,看上去很虚弱,那么结果就对你不利。笔直地坐两分钟就能产生心理差异。
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3. It’s easy to slouch if you’re not constantly thinking about your posture (in fact, you’re probably even doing it while you read this article), but there’s good news: Your slouch is reversible.
如果你没有时常考虑你的姿势(事实上你在读这篇文章时仍可能是这样),你很容易没精打采,但这里有个好消息:你的没精打采是可以改变的。
- slouch (n.) 1510s, "lazy man," variant of slouk (1560s), probably from a Scandinavian source, perhaps Old Norse slokr "lazy fellow," and related to slack (adj.) on the notion of "sagging, drooping." Meaning "stooping of the head and shoulders" first recorded 1725. Slouch hat, made of soft material, first attested 1764.
- slouch (v.) "walk with a slouch," 1754; "have a downcast or stooped aspect," 1755; from slouch (n.). Related: Slouched; slouching (1610s as a past-participle adjective; 1660s of persons, 1690s of hats).
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