trance
trance 英 [trɑ:ns] 美 [træns]
n. 恍惚;出神;着迷,入迷 vt. 使恍惚;使发呆
进行时:trancing 过去式:tranced 过去分词:tranced 第三人称单数:trances 名词复数:trances
- If your eyes are open but you're not fully awake and in control, you may be in trance. Someone might have hypnotized you, or just a glimpse of your latest heartthrob might send you into a trance.
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- n. 恍惚;出神;着迷,入迷
- vt. 使恍惚;使发呆
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1. Having fallen into a trance state, they acted in accordance with these supernaturalist beliefs: dancing wildly for days on end.
人们陷入了恍惚状态,他们的行动与超自然主义者的信仰相一致:接连数日疯狂地跳舞。
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2. The wicked witch had thrown her into a trance, hoping she would die, and that the king would then marry her daughter; but on the king speaking to her, the spell was broken.
这个邪恶的巫婆曾让她陷入恍惚,希望她死去,这样国王就能够娶她的女儿了;但是当国王这么对她说时,咒语被破解了。
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3. When he drums and chants in a certain sequence, some of his listeners are lulled into a trance.
当他以某种规律击鼓吟唱时,一些听众会受其引导而出神。
- trance (n.) late 14c., "state of extreme dread or suspense," also "a half-conscious or insensible condition, state of insensibility to mundane things," from Old French transe "fear of coming evil," originally "coma, passage from life to death" (12c.), from transir "be numb with fear," originally "die, pass on," from Latin transire "cross over, go over, pass over, hasten over, pass away," from trans "across, beyond" (see trans-) + ire "to go" (from PIE root *ei- "to go"). French trance in its modern sense has been reborrowed from English. As a music genre, from c. 1993.
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