|
简明英汉词典 | ||
|
naive | |
| [nB:5i:v] | ||
| adj. | ||
| 天真的 | ||
|
美国传统词典[双解] | ||
|
naive | |
| na.ive 或 na.?ve | ||
| AHD:[n?-?v“] 也作 na.if 或 na.?f [n?-?f“] | ||
| D.J.[n$86i8v]也作 na.if 或 na.?f [n$86i8f] | ||
| K.K.[n$6iv]也作 na.if 或 na.?f [n$6if] | ||
| adj.(形容词) | ||
(1) |
Lacking worldliness and sophistication; artless. | |
| 缺乏俗气和世故的;自然的 | ||
(2) |
Simple and credulous as a child; ingenuous. | |
| 天真的:如同孩子般简单和易轻信的;天真的 | ||
(3) |
Lacking critical ability or analytical insight; not subtle or learned: | |
| 幼稚的:缺乏批评能力或分析眼光的;不敏感的或没有经验的: | ||
| “this extravagance of metaphors, with its naive bombast”(H.L. Mencken) | ||
| “这些隐喻的夸张,带着天真的高调”(H.L.门琴) | ||
(4) |
Not previously subjected to experiments: | |
| 未实验的:以前未曾用作实验的: | ||
| testing naive mice. | ||
| 测试未试验过的老鼠 | ||
(5) |
Not having previously taken or received a particular drug: | |
| 未用过的:以前从未用过的特别的药物: | ||
| persons naive to marijuana. | ||
| 没用过大麻的人 | ||
| n.(名词) | ||
| One who is artless, credulous, or uncritical. | ||
| 天真的人,易轻信的人,无批判力的人 | ||
|
语源 | ||
(1) |
French na?ve [feminine of] na?f | |
| 法语 na?ve [] na?f的阴性词 | ||
(2) |
from Old French [natural, native] | |
| 源自 古法语 [自然的,天真的] | ||
(3) |
from Latin n3ovus} [native, rustic] | |
| 源自 拉丁语 n3ovus} [天真的,粗俗的] | ||
(4) |
from n3s [past participle of] n3sco [to be born] * see gen…- | |
| 源自 n3s [] n3sco的过去分词 [出生] *参见 gen…- | ||
|
继承用法 | ||
|
naive“ly | |
| adv.(副词) | ||
|
naive“ness | |
| n.(名词) | ||
|
参考词汇 | ||
(1) |
naive, simple, ingenuous, unsophisticated, natural, unaffected, guileless, artless | |
(2) |
These adjectives mean free from guile, cunning, or sham. | |
| 这些形容词都含有不狡诈、不狡猾或不虚伪的意思。 | ||
(3) |
Naive suggests the simplicity of nature; it sometimes connotes a credulity that impedes effective functioning in a practical world: | |
| Naive 意在表示本性的单纯;有时它有轻信的意思,在现实生活中有时阻碍有效的工作: | ||
| “this naive simple creature, with his straightforward and friendly eyes so eager to believe appearances” (Arnold Bennett). | ||
| “这个天真的小家伙,友善率直的眼睛如此轻易相信表面现象” (阿诺德·贝内特)。 | ||
(4) |
Simple stresses absence of complexity, artifice, pretentiousness, or dissimulation; it may imply a favorable quality, such as openness of character, or an unfavorable one, such as lack of good sense: | |
| Simple 强调不复杂、无巧饰、不伪装或不掩饰;它也可以含有好的品质(如性格开朗)或不好的品质(如缺乏好的鉴赏力): | ||
| “Those of highest worth and breeding are most simple in manner and attire” (Francis Parkman). | ||
| “那些最有名望和教养的人在穿着举止上最为朴素自然” (弗朗西斯·帕克曼)。 | ||
| “He was one of those simple men that love and sympathize with children” (W.H. Hudson). | ||
| “他是那种性格开朗的人之一,爱护同情孩子” (W·H·哈得逊)。 | ||
| “Among simple people she had the reputation of being a prodigy of information” (Harriet Beecher Stowe). | ||
| “在普通人当中,她享有信息通的美名” (哈里特·比彻·斯托)。 | ||
(5) |
Ingenuous denotes childlike directness, simplicity, and innocence; it connotes an inability to mask one's feelings: | |
| Ingenuous 着重于孩子般的直率、单纯和天真;它暗示缺乏掩饰自己情感的能力: | ||
| an ingenuous admission of responsibility. | ||
| 坦诚地承认义务。 | ||
(6) |
Unsophisticated indicates absence of worldly wisdom: | |
| Unsophisticated 强调不谙世故: | ||
| The sights of Paris bowled over the unsophisticated tourists. | ||
| 巴黎景色让不谙世故的旅游者们大吃一惊。 | ||
(7) |
Natural stresses spontaneity that is the result of freedom from self-consciousness or inhibitions: | |
| Natural 强调由于没有自我意识或心理抑制而产生的自然: | ||
| “When Kavanagh was present, Alice was happy, but embarrassed; Cecelia, joyous and natural” (Henry Wadsworth Longfellow). | ||
| “当卡瓦纳出现时,爱丽斯很高兴但有点窘迫;切切里,快乐而自然” (亨利·沃兹沃斯·朗费罗)。 | ||
(8) |
Unaffected implies sincerity and lack of affectation: | |
| Unaffected 指真诚而不做作: | ||
| “With men he can be rational and unaffected, but when he has ladies to please, every feature works” (Jane Austen). | ||
| “和男人们在一起他可以相当真诚和理智,但当他要讨小姐们欢心时他会极尽谄媚之能事” (简·奥斯汀)。 | ||
(9) |
Guileless signifies absence of insidious or treacherous cunning: | |
| Guileless 强调没有隐患或奸诈阴险: | ||
| a harmless, honest, guileless creature; | ||
| 无害的、诚实的、坦率的小家伙; | ||
| a guileless, disarming look. | ||
| 真诚的化解敌意的一瞥。 | ||
(10) |
Artless stresses absence of plan or purpose, as to mislead, and suggests a lack of concern for or awareness of the reaction produced in others: | |
| Artless 强调无计划或目的,引起误导,并有对别人的反应缺乏关心或意识的意思: | ||
| a woman of artless grace and simple goodness. | ||
| 淡漠雅致而又淳朴善良的女子 | ||
|
现代英汉词典 | ||
|
naive | |
| [nB:5i:v] | ||
| adj. | ||
(1) |
幼稚的,无知的 | |
| a naive remark | ||
| 幼稚的话 | ||
(2) |
天真的;质朴的 | |
| a naive girl | ||
| 天真的女孩 | ||
|
用法词典 | ||
|
naive | |
| (法语naif<拉丁语nativus 自然的) | ||
|
美国传统词典 | ||
|
naive | |
| na.ive or na.?ve | ||
| AHD:[n?-?v“] also na.if or na.?f [n?-?f“] | ||
| D.J.[n$86i8v]also na.if or na.?f [n$86i8f] | ||
| K.K.[n$6iv]also na.if or na.?f [n$6if] | ||
| adj. | ||
(1) |
Lacking worldliness and sophistication; artless. | |
(2) |
Simple and credulous as a child; ingenuous. | |
(3) |
Lacking critical ability or analytical insight; not subtle or learned: | |
| “this extravagance of metaphors, with its naive bombast”(H.L. Mencken) | ||
(4) |
Not previously subjected to experiments: | |
| testing naive mice. | ||
(5) |
Not having previously taken or received a particular drug: | |
| persons naive to marijuana. | ||
| n. | ||
| One who is artless, credulous, or uncritical. | ||
|
语源 | ||
(1) |
French na?ve [feminine of] na?f | |
(2) |
from Old French [natural, native] | |
(3) |
from Latin n3ovus} [native, rustic] | |
(4) |
from n3s [past participle of] n3sco [to be born] * see gen…- | |
|
继承用法 | ||
|
naive“ly | |
| adv. | ||
|
naive“ness | |
| n. | ||
|
参考词汇 | ||
(1) |
naive, simple, ingenuous, unsophisticated, natural, unaffected, guileless, artless | |
(2) |
These adjectives mean free from guile, cunning, or sham. | |
(3) |
Naive suggests the simplicity of nature; it sometimes connotes a credulity that impedes effective functioning in a practical world: | |
| “this naive simple creature, with his straightforward and friendly eyes so eager to believe appearances” (Arnold Bennett). | ||
(4) |
Simple stresses absence of complexity, artifice, pretentiousness, or dissimulation; it may imply a favorable quality, such as openness of character, or an unfavorable one, such as lack of good sense: | |
| “Those of highest worth and breeding are most simple in manner and attire” (Francis Parkman). | ||
| “He was one of those simple men that love and sympathize with children” (W.H. Hudson). | ||
| “Among simple people she had the reputation of being a prodigy of information” (Harriet Beecher Stowe). | ||
(5) |
Ingenuous denotes childlike directness, simplicity, and innocence; it connotes an inability to mask one's feelings: | |
| an ingenuous admission of responsibility. | ||
(6) |
Unsophisticated indicates absence of worldly wisdom: | |
| The sights of Paris bowled over the unsophisticated tourists. | ||
(7) |
Natural stresses spontaneity that is the result of freedom from self-consciousness or inhibitions: | |
| “When Kavanagh was present, Alice was happy, but embarrassed; Cecelia, joyous and natural” (Henry Wadsworth Longfellow). | ||
(8) |
Unaffected implies sincerity and lack of affectation: | |
| “With men he can be rational and unaffected, but when he has ladies to please, every feature works” (Jane Austen). | ||
(9) |
Guileless signifies absence of insidious or treacherous cunning: | |
| a harmless, honest, guileless creature; | ||
| a guileless, disarming look. | ||
(10) |
Artless stresses absence of plan or purpose, as to mislead, and suggests a lack of concern for or awareness of the reaction produced in others: | |
| a woman of artless grace and simple goodness. | ||
|
英汉航海大词典 | ||
|
naive | |
| n.自然的 | ||
|
英汉化学大词典 | ||
|
naive | |
| adj.自然的,天真的 | ||
|
英汉经贸大词典 | ||
|
naive | |
| n.自然的 | ||
|
英汉计算机大词典 | ||
|
naive | |
| adj.自然的(天真的) | ||
|
英汉心理学大词典 | ||
|
naive | |
| 朴素的 | ||