|
简明英汉词典 | ||
|
pathetic | |
| [pE5Wetik] | ||
| adj. | ||
| 可怜的, 悲惨的 | ||
|
美国传统词典[双解] | ||
|
pathetic | |
| pa.thet.ic | ||
| AHD:[p…-thμt“1k] 也作 pa.thet.i.cal [-1-k…l] | ||
| D.J.[p*6Getik]也作 pa.thet.i.cal [ik*l] | ||
| K.K.[p*6GWt!k]也作 pa.thet.i.cal [!k*l] | ||
| adj.(形容词) | ||
(1) |
Arousing or capable of arousing sympathetic sadness and compassion. | |
| 令人同情的,可怜的:激发或能够激发伤感和同情的 | ||
(2) |
Arousing or capable of arousing scornful pity. | |
| 又笨又可怜的,无价值的:引起或能够引发带有轻蔑色彩的怜悯的 | ||
|
语源 | ||
(1) |
French pathétique | |
| 法语 pathétique | ||
(2) |
from Late Latin path?s | |
| 源自 后期拉丁语 path?s | ||
(3) |
from Greek path?s [sensitive] | |
| 源自 希腊语 path?s [敏感的] | ||
(4) |
from path?s [liable to suffer] | |
| 源自 path?s [易于遭受苦难的] | ||
(5) |
from pathos [suffering] * see k went(h)- | |
| 源自 pathos [痛苦,苦难] *参见 k went(h)- | ||
|
继承用法 | ||
|
pathet“ically | |
| adv.(副词) | ||
|
参考词汇 | ||
(1) |
pathetic, pitiful, pitiable, piteous, lamentable | |
(2) |
These adjectives describe one that inspires or deserves pity. Something pathetic elicits sympathetic sadness and compassion: | |
| 这些形容词都指激发或赢得同情的人或物。Pathetic 表示伤感和同情: | ||
| “Everything human is pathetic” (Mark Twain). Often the word refers to what is so poor that it arouses scornful pity: | ||
| “人类具有同情心” (马克·吐温)。这个词常指因十分贫穷而引起轻视的怜悯: | ||
| The academic standards in the school were pathetic. Both pitiful and pitiable apply to what is touchingly sad: | ||
| 学校的学术水平低得可怜。 Pitiful 和 pitiable 都用于指令人感伤的东西: | ||
| “She told a most pitiful story” (Samuel Butler). | ||
| “她讲叙了一个十分令人感伤的故事” (塞缪尔·巴特勒)。 | ||
| “The emperor had been in a state of pitiable vacillation” (William Hickling Prescott). Sometimes the terms connote contemptuous pity, as for what is hopelessly inept or inadequate: | ||
| “皇帝曾处于令人可怜的举棋不定状态” (威廉·希克林·普雷斯科特)。这两个词有时暗指轻蔑的同情,如令人绝望地无能或不合适的东西: | ||
| “If when the chips are down, the world's most powerful nation . . . acts like a pitiful, helpless giant, the forces of totalitarianism and anarchy will threaten free nations and free institutions throughout the world” (Richard M. Nixon). | ||
| “如果当情况危急时,世界上最强大的国家…象一个可怜的无助的巨人,那么集权主义和独裁势力将会威胁到全世界的自由国家和组织机构” (理查德·M·尼克松)。 | ||
| “That cold accretion called the world, which, so terrible in the mass, is so unformidable, even pitiable, in its units” (Thomas Hardy). | ||
| “那个被称为地球的冲积而成的寒冷球体,整体是如此令人生惧,各部分又是那么懦弱甚至令人生怜” (托马斯·哈代)。 | ||
(3) |
Piteous applies to what cries out for pity: | |
| Piteous 用于指因可怜喊出的: | ||
| “They . . . made piteous lamentation to us to save them” (Daniel Defoe). | ||
| “他们向我们示以令人可怜的悲伤来自保” (丹尼尔·笛福)。 | ||
(4) |
Lamentable suggests the evocation of pity mixed with sorrow: | |
| Lamentable 指含有悲伤的同情的唤起: | ||
| “Tell thou the lamentable tale of me,/And send the hearers weeping to their beds” (Shakespeare).See also Synonyms at moving | ||
| “讲述我的悲伤故事/让听者痛不欲生” (莎士比亚)参见同义词 moving | ||
|
现代英汉词典 | ||
|
pathetic | |
| [pE5WetIk] | ||
| adj. | ||
(1) |
哀怜的;令人难过的;引起怜悯的;悲惨的 | |
(2) |
不值得的;毫无希望成功的 | |
|
用法词典 | ||
|
pathetic | |
| 拉丁语patheticus<希腊语pathētikos | ||
|
英文相关词典 | ||
|
pathetic | |
| deplorable distressing miserable moving pitiful sad touching | ||
|
美国传统词典 | ||
|
pathetic | |
| pa.thet.ic | ||
| AHD:[p…-thμt“1k] also pa.thet.i.cal [-1-k…l] | ||
| D.J.[p*6Getik]also pa.thet.i.cal [ik*l] | ||
| K.K.[p*6GWt!k]also pa.thet.i.cal [!k*l] | ||
| adj. | ||
(1) |
Arousing or capable of arousing sympathetic sadness and compassion. | |
(2) |
Arousing or capable of arousing scornful pity. | |
|
语源 | ||
(1) |
French pathétique | |
(2) |
from Late Latin path?s | |
(3) |
from Greek path?s [sensitive] | |
(4) |
from path?s [liable to suffer] | |
(5) |
from pathos [suffering] * see k went(h)- | |
|
继承用法 | ||
|
pathet“ically | |
| adv. | ||
|
参考词汇 | ||
(1) |
pathetic, pitiful, pitiable, piteous, lamentable | |
(2) |
These adjectives describe one that inspires or deserves pity. Something pathetic elicits sympathetic sadness and compassion: | |
| “Everything human is pathetic” (Mark Twain). Often the word refers to what is so poor that it arouses scornful pity: | ||
| The academic standards in the school were pathetic. Both pitiful and pitiable apply to what is touchingly sad: | ||
| “She told a most pitiful story” (Samuel Butler). | ||
| “The emperor had been in a state of pitiable vacillation” (William Hickling Prescott). Sometimes the terms connote contemptuous pity, as for what is hopelessly inept or inadequate: | ||
| “If when the chips are down, the world's most powerful nation . . . acts like a pitiful, helpless giant, the forces of totalitarianism and anarchy will threaten free nations and free institutions throughout the world” (Richard M. Nixon). | ||
| “That cold accretion called the world, which, so terrible in the mass, is so unformidable, even pitiable, in its units” (Thomas Hardy). | ||
(3) |
Piteous applies to what cries out for pity: | |
| “They . . . made piteous lamentation to us to save them” (Daniel Defoe). | ||
(4) |
Lamentable suggests the evocation of pity mixed with sorrow: | |
| “Tell thou the lamentable tale of me,/And send the hearers weeping to their beds” (Shakespeare).See also Synonyms at moving | ||
|
英汉化学大词典 | ||
|
pathetic | |
| adj.可怜的,感情上的 | ||
|
英汉计算机大词典 | ||
|
pathetic | |
| adj.可怜的(感情上的) | ||
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英汉医学大词典 | ||
|
pathetic | |
| adj.感情的 | ||