Infatuate
[ɪn'fætʃʊeɪt;-tjʊ-] or [ɪn'fætjʊɪt]
解释:
(verb.) arouse unreasoning love or passion in and cause to behave in an irrational way; 'His new car has infatuated him'; 'love has infatuated her'.
手打:威利--From WordNet
解释:
(a.) Infatuated.
(v. t.) To make foolish; to affect with folly; to weaken the intellectual powers of, or to deprive of sound judgment.
(v. t.) To inspire with a foolish and extravagant passion; as, to be infatuated with gaming.
整理:莎丽
同义词及近义词:
v. a. Befool, besot, stultify, delude, make foolish, deprive of reason, deprive of sound judgment or common sense.
校对:诺艾尔
解释:
v.t. to make foolish: to affect with folly: to deprive of judgment: to inspire with foolish passion: to stupefy.—adj. infatuated or foolish.—n. Infatuā′tion.
校对:托妮
例句:
- The rich, pursued the infatuated and unconscious Donne, are a parcel of misers, never living as persons with their incomes ought to live. 夏洛蒂·勃朗特. 雪莉.
- Shirley, in spite of her whims and oddities, her dodges and delays, has an infatuated fondness for him. 夏洛蒂·勃朗特. 雪莉.
- How could she allow herself to become so infatuated with a stranger? 托马斯·哈代. 还乡.
- We are not infatuated with these French railway cars, though. 马克·吐温. 傻子出国记.
- She would come and talk to me about them with an infatuated and persevering dotage, strange to behold in a person not yet twenty-five. 夏洛蒂·勃朗特. 维莱特.
- I shuddered to hear the infatuated assertion. 夏洛蒂·勃朗特. 简·爱.
- It was their infatuated perseverance in an unjustifiable, a hopeless, a ruinous war, which had brought the nation to its present pass. 夏洛蒂·勃朗特. 雪莉.
手打:兰斯洛特