throb
throb 英 [θrɒb] 美 [θrɑb]
vi. 悸动;抽动;颤动;跳动着作痛;充满活力 n. 悸动;脉搏
进行时:throbbing 过去式:throbbed 过去分词:throbbed 第三人称单数:throbs 名词复数:throbs
- Things that throb have a strong, regular pulse or rhythm. Loud music with a heavy beat or bass line can seem to throb inside your head — especially if your downstairs neighbors are playing it while you're trying to sleep.
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- vi. 悸动;抽动;颤动;跳动着作痛;充满活力
- n. 悸动;脉搏
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1. The first impulse to write this novel is described as a throb.
写这本小说的第一冲动就被描绘成悸动。
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2. The excruciating pain of the first blast is gone, and now there is the throb and ache of an amputated soul.
第一次爆发的极度痛苦已经消失,现在有的是一个被截去一部分的灵魂的悸动和疼痛。
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3. I haven't even learned to recognise it for what it is yet, and its presentation varies, sometimes a low-level throb of unease, sometimes a lurching panic.
我甚至还没有真正认识它是什么,它的表现变化多端,有时候是一种轻微的不安悸动,有时候是一种突如其来的恐慌。
- throb (v.) late 14c., of uncertain origin, perhaps meant to represent in sound the pulsation of arteries and veins or the heart. Related: Throbbed; throbbing. The noun is first attested 1570s.
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