酷兔英语
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26. 增加 27. 笑 28. 疯 29.味道 30. 滑 31. 怕 32. 闪光 33. 大 34. 感情 35. 工作,职业 36. 停止 37. 旅行 38. 抓,握 39. 看,凝视 40. 静 41. 消灭 42. 结果 43. 表明,代表 44. 帮助 45. 获得,得到 46. 礼品,礼物 47. 愚蠢 48. 地区 49. 会议,集会 50. 成就,功绩


26.增加


increase: To make or become larger in amount or number.


it refers to quantity or intensity as well as size.


The population of this county has increased.


add: To put together with something else so as to increase the


number size, importance.


He added some wood to increase the fire.


(扩大) enlarge: To grown larger or wider.


I want to enlarge this photograph/house.


(放大) magnify: To make something appear larger than in reality, esp. by means of a lens.


You have magnified the peril.


(扩充) amplify: To make large or fuller, esp. give fuller information, more details etc.


to amplify a radio signal/sound.


augment: (fml) To become larger or greater.


It emphasizes the action of addition.


He augmented his income by writing some short stories.


(扩展 扩张) expand: To increase in range scope or volume as well as in size. Iron expands when it is heated.


(加长) extend: To make longer in space or time, to extend a railway.


Can't you extend your visit for a few days.


27.笑


(微笑)


smile: The corners of your mouth move outwards and slightly upwards.


He smiles his consent./with satisfaction.


(大笑) laugh: To make a noise to show one's amusement and


happiness. You can laugh at a joke or at an amusing sight. You can laugh at someone without being amused.


They all laughed loudly.


(露齿而笑) grin: To smile with the teeth.


The boy grinned from ear to ear when I gave him a


sweet.


(暗笑 含笑) chuckle: To laugh quietly.


I could hear him chuckling to himself as he read


that funny article.


(咯咯笑) giggle: To laugh repeatedlyfoolishly and uncontrollably, esp. by girls.


I heard them giggle when I passed by the girls.


(窃笑 暗笑) snicker: To laugh in a disrespectful more or less secret way.


On hearing his absurd opinion, I went snickering.


(假笑 痴笑) simper: To smile in a silly unnatural way.


When I told him the thing, he simply simpered.


(得意的笑) smirk: To smile in a false or too satisfied way.


He smirked at everyone that passed.


(窃笑) titter: To laugh very quietly from nervousness or badly


controlled amusement.


The girls tittered when they heard this.


(狂笑) guffaw: To laugh loudly and rudely.


All the people guffawed at his silly words.


(哄笑) roar: To laugh long and loudly.


They roared after they heard the joke.


(欢笑) chortle: To give a laugh of pleasure or satisfaction.


He chortled with delight when I told him the news.


(笑骂) taunt: To try to make sb angry, or upset by making unkind


remarks, laughing at faults or failures.


They taunted her with her inability to swim.


(嘲笑 嘲弄) ridicule: To laugh unkindly at or to make unkind fun of.


They all ridiculed the idea.


(讥笑) deride: To laugh at or make fun of as of no value. /to mock


at someone with contempt They all derided his foolishness.


(嘲弄) mock: To laugh at sb(sth) when it is wrong to do so, esp.


by copying in a funny or contemptuous way.


The students mocked the seriousness of his expression.


twit: (infl) To make fun of sb because of behavior, a mistake, a fault, etc.


He twitted her with her timidity.


(嘲笑 轻蔑地笑) scoff: To laugh at, to speak or act disrespectfully. /to


speak in scornful mocking way.


It was a great invention but at first many people scoffed at it.


(戏弄)


chaff: (infl) To make fun of sb in a good-humored way.


He chaffed the man about his mistakes in speaking English.


(讥笑) jeer: To laugh rudely at /to insult sb in a loud, unpleasant way.


They always jeer at the priests.


gibe(jibe): To laugh at with the intention of hurting the feeling with sarcastic remarks.


Don't gibe at her behavior until you know the reason for it.


(讥笑 冷笑) sneer: To express proud dislike by a kind of usu, one- side


smile or to show scorn or contempt by looks.


She sneered at the furniture in his neighbor's home.


joke: To make fun of.


You mustn't joke with him about religion.


(取笑) jest: To act or speak playful, not seriously.


Don't jest about serious things.


(戏弄) banter: To speak, or act playfully or jokingly.


We bantered him on the subject of marriage.


(轻视) scorn: To look down upon.


28.疯


mad: Showing that one has amanita illness which often causes them to behave in strange way.


crazy: (infl) Very strange or foolish.


psychotic: The most precise one. used by psychiatrists.


insane Not sound in mind. used in scientific articles.


lunatic: (old derog) wildly foolish.


demented It indicates sb's mentality has degenerated from a precious level.


maniac: (n) A mad person who is violent and dangerous.


29.味道


smell: The most general one.


It refers to something pleasant or unpleasant.


odo(u)r: (fml) More used in scientific articles.


fragrance: A sweet or pleasant smell.


It refers to flowers and stresses a delicate smell from plants.


Those roses have a delightful fragrance.


scent: A smell esp. left by an animals, an pleasant smell.


Our dog lost the fox's scent.


perfume: A sweet or pleasant smell.


It refers to either natural smell or a man-made smell and stresses a strong and rich smell compared with fragrance


aroma: A strong usu pleasant smell, often a spicy smell.


flavor: The particular quality of tasting good or pleasantly strong. The bread hasn't much flavor.


savor: The smell of food by the processes of cooking.


The meat had cooked too long and lost its savor.


stink: A strong unpleasant smell. the stink of sweaty feet.


stench: A very strong unpleasant smell.


30.怕


fear: The feeling that one has when danger is near.


(可怕) dread: A great fear esp. of some harm to come.


It suggests fear of facing whatever is coming. Usually dread also means loss of courage.


Illness is the great dread of his life.


(畏惧) fright: The feeling or experience of fear. sudden great fear.


I nearly died of fright at the sight of escaped lion.


(恐慌) alarm: Sudden fear and anxiety as caused by the possibility of


danger and excitement caused by fear of danger.


The news caused great alarm.


(恐惧) terror: Extreme and intense fear.


The people ran from the enemy in terror.


(恐怖 战栗) horror: A feeling of great shock, fear and dislike.


I cried out in horror as I saw the man killed.


(惊恐万状) panic: Sudden uncontrollable quickly-spreading fear or terror, which results in unreasonable and frantic activity.


When I realized the situation I got into a panic.


(敬畏) awe: A feeling respect mixed with fear and wonder.


He always stands in awe of his father.


31.闪光


shine: The most general one.


(闪耀) glitter: To shine brightly with flashing points of light.


All that glitters is not gold.


(发火花) sparkle: To shine in small flashes.


It suggests uneven, bright flashes reflected from light-catching objects.


We can see a diamond sparkling in the sunlight.


(闪光) flash: To give out a sudden and monetary bright ray of light/


To shine suddenly for a moment.


(闪耀) glisten: To shine from or as if from a wet surface.


His hair glistened with oil. The wet road glistened.


(闪烁) gleam: To send out a bright light moderately, mildly not violently.


A cat's eye gleamed in the dark. The lantern gleamed.


(冒火花) spark: To send out small bits of fire.


He was so angry that his eyes sparked furiously.


(闪烁不定) flicker: To burn unsteadily, shine with an unsteady light.


The candle flickered and then went out.


glimmer: To give a very faint, unsteady light.


The lights glimmered in the distance.


(闪烁) twinkle: To shine with a unsteady light that rapidly changes from fright to faint.


The stars are twinkling in the sky in the evening.


glow: To give out heat and/or light without flames or smoke.


The iron bar was heated until it glowed.


(闪烁) glint: To give out small flashes of light, as the eyes of an eager person are supposed to do


The sun glinted through the leaves after the shower.


(眩光) glare: To shine with a strong light in a way unpleasant to the eyes.


The lights of the car glared at me.


flame: To burn brightly.


You can see the burning log flaming.


(冒火苗) blaze: To burn with a bright flame.


the house is blazing.


(闪闪燃烧) flare: To burn with a bright flame, but uncertainly or for a short time.


The candles flared in the wind.


dazzle: To make unable to see because of a sudden very strong light.


The headlight dazzles.


coruscate: (fml) to flash, sparkle.


The sparks coruscated.


scintillate:


The gems scintillate.


32.大


big: Large in size, extent or important.


large: Much bigger than average


great: Very large, important, and good.


great change / great writer / great idea.


huge: Very fig in size, amount and degree.


It stresses volume.(体积)


a huge house/ make a huge profit.


vast: Very large and wide, great in size or amount.


It stresses area.(体积)two dimensional extensions


It is a vast expanse of desert.


vast plains/ vast majority / at vast expanse.


immense: Very great in size or degree./very large or huge.


It stresses three dimensional largesse.


It implies immeasurableness.


an immense palace/ immense importance


The government will build an immense stadium.


enormous: Extremely large./very large in size, amount or degree.


It stresses not only size but degree.


It implies abnormality.


He earned enormous sums of money


an enormous animal/ enormous appetite/ enormous amount


tremendous: Extraordinarily large in size, amount or degree. / large or impressive


It implies astonishment, terror.


tremendous speed / tremendous noise/ tremendous amount /tremendous feeling.


gigantic: Immense in size, on a very large scale like a giant.


titanic: Very big or important.


It refers back to the Titans, a race of giant in Greek mythology. It stresses force and power.


We've made titanic effort to achieve our purpose.


colossal: Very large indeed.


It comes from Colossus of Rhodes a huge statue that is


one of the wonders of the ancient world.


It implies incredibility.


33.感情


feeling(s): It can refer to mind or body. It's either pleasant or painful.


(感觉) sensation: (u c n) A direct feeling coming from the senses and conveyed to the nervous system by the organs of seeing, hearing, touching, tasting or smelling. Sugar gives a sensation of sweetness.


(激情) emotion: (c n) Any of the strong feelings of the human spirit Love, joy, anger, hatred and grief are emotions.


His speech had an effect on our emotions rather than our reason.


(强烈的激情) passion: Strong emotions, strong, deep often uncontrollable


feeling, esp. of sexual love, hatred or anger.


The poet expressed his burning passion for the woman he loved.


(情操 情趣) sentiment: (u c n) A tender or fine feeling as of pity, love, sadness or imaginativeremembrance of the past.


It's not a beautiful watch, but I wear it for sentiment because it is my father's. Admiration, patriotism and loyalty are sentiments.


34.工作 职业


work: (u n) A very general one.


job: (c n) Any sort of gainful regular employment whether


permanent or temporary.


He had a good jog in a bank.


profession: It suggests a position that can't be gained without a considerable amount of higher education.


It implies intellectual work, scholarship and mainly refers to three learned professions-law, medicine and theology.


What do you think of the profession to be a teacher?


occupation: What he is engaged in, either continuously or temporarily, for any purpose, whether of profit of amusement, learning.


Can you find occupation suitable for his abilities.


employment: (u n) What one is doing, work done in service of another in order to make a living or get pay./temporary business,


The government gives some money to the worker out of employment.


vocation: (c n) A job which one does because one thinks one has a special fitness or ability or sense of duty.


It suggests the people do it in order to help others not for the earning of a livelihood. teaching and nursing. Teaching children ought or be a vocation as well as a way of earning money.


position: (fml) A job, post, usually involving professions managerial or clerical work, not manual.


She got a position as a governess.


He lost his position as steward.


35.停止


stop: The most general one.


pause: To stop for a short time.


He paused to pick up a stone.



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