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单词 languish
释义 I. languish, n.|ˈlæŋgwɪʃ|
[f. the verb.]
1. The action or state of languishing.
c1380Wyclif Serm. Sel. Wks. I. 198 Crist was..occupied in heeling of syke men and men þat were in languishe.1382Luke iv. 40 Sike men with dyuerse langwischingis [v.r. languyschis, languisches].1485Caxton Chas. Gt. 233 Of the languysshe that was comynge to Charles, he wyste not, how sone it was comyng.1562T. Phaer æneid ix. B b iij b, The purple floure that..In languish withering dies.1592Shakes. Rom. & Jul. i. ii. 49 One desparate greefe cures with anothers languish.1613–16W. Browne Brit. Past. i. i. 11 Faire Nymph, surcease this death-alluring languish.1682T. A. Carolina 19 It..being..admirable in the languishes of the Spirit Faintings.1718Entertainer xix. 129 Religion is upon the Languish, and only the Ghost of Godliness remains.1833Hartley Coleridge Poems I. 118 A long record of perishable languish.
2. A tender look or glance.
1715–20Pope Iliad xviii. 50 The blue languish of soft Alia's eye.1728–46Thomson Spring 949 Then forth he walks, Beneath the trembling languish of her beam.1802W. Irving Lett. J. Oldstyle (1824) 19 An arch glance in one box was rivalled by a smile in another;..and in a fourth a most bewitching languish carried all before it.
II. ˈlanguish, a. Obs. rare—0.
[? f. the vb.]
Languishing, sickly.
1552Huloet, Languyshe to be, langueo.1660Hexham, een Vlockaert, a Pyning or a Languish man.
III. languish, v.|ˈlæŋgwɪʃ|
Forms: 4 languis, -uysce, 4–5 -uess(e, -uysh(e, -uysch(e, -wiss(e, -wys(se, -wisch(e, -wis(s)h(e, -usch(e, -ussh(e, 4–6 -uiss(e, -uissh(e, (6 language), 4– languish.
[a. F. languiss-, languir, = Pr., Sp., Pg. languir, It. languire:—popular L. *languīre for class. L. languē-re (inchoative languēscĕre); perh. cogn. w. L. lax-us (see lax a.) and Teut. *slako- slack a.]
1. intr. Of living beings (also of plants or vegetation): To grow weak, faint, or feeble: to lose health, have one's vitality impaired; to continue in a state of feebleness and suffering. In early use often: To be sick (const. of).
a1300Cursor M. 14138 In his sekenes he languist sua, Þat he na fote had might to ga.c1330R. Brunne Chron. Wace (Rolls) 9550 Bedrede doun ful longe he lay, & languissed so forþ fro day to day.1382Wyclif Dan. viii. 27 And Y, Danyel, languyshide, and was seeke by ful manye days.1494Fabyan Chron. 651 He lastly fell in a greuouse sykenesse..And so languysshynge by the space of thre yeres more before he dyed.1601Shakes. All's Well i. i. 37 What is it..the King languishes of? Laf. A Fistula, my Lord.1635R. Bolton Comf. Affl. Consc. v. (ed. 2) 202 Some for the losse of an over-loved child have languished, fallen into a consumption and lost their owne lives.1744Berkeley Siris §77 Those who had been cured by evacuations often languished long.1759tr. Duhamel's Husb. ii. i. (1762) 123 Observing one day a tuft of wheat which languished.1783Crabbe Village i. 141 Health, Labour's fair child, that languishes with wealth.1798Ferriar Illustr. Sterne ii. 24 He wrote for the recreation of persons languishing in sickness.1850A. Jameson Leg. Monast. Ord. (1863) 197 It was said of him that he did not live, but languished through life.1865Kingsley Herew. xiv. 180 He lies languishing of wounds.
fig.1652–62Heylin Cosmogr. iv. (1682) 26 It began to languish, and was at last reduced to nothing but a few scattered Houses.1882C. Pebody Eng. Journalism xviii. 134 The Morning Chronicle..languished and died.
b. To live under conditions which lower the vitality or depress the spirits.
1489Caxton Faytes of A. iii. xxiii. 223 To..make hys prysonners to langwysshe in pryson.1592tr. Junius on Rev. ix. 4 The miserable world languishing in so great calamities.1711Addison Spect. No. 181 ⁋2, I..have ever since languished under the Displeasure of an inexorable Father.1797Mrs. Radcliffe Italian xi, The unfortunate captive is left to languish in chains and darkness.1828Carlyle Misc. (1857) I. 195 The street where he languished in poverty is called by his name.1879Farrar St. Paul (1883) 329 Peoples languishing under the withering atrophy of Turkish rule.
2. Of appetites or activities: To grow slack, lose vigour or intensity. Of light, colour, sound, etc.: To become faint.
1626Bacon Sylva §255 Visibles and Audibles..doe languish and lessen by degrees, according to the Distance of the Obiects from the Sensories.1635R. Bolton Comf. Affl. Consc. xii. (ed. 2) 509 The brightness of lamps languish in the light.1707Watts Hymn, ‘Come holy Spirit, heavenly Dove’ iii, Hosannas languish on our Tongues, And our Devotion dies.1855Macaulay Hist. Eng. xx. IV. 516 Along the eastern frontier of France the war during this year seemed to languish.1871G. H. Napheys Prev. & Cure Dis. ii. i. 414 The appetite languishes.
b. Of health: To fall off.
1729Savage Wanderer v. 670 Late months, that made the vernal season gay, Saw my health languish off in pale decay.
3. To droop in spirits; to pine with love, grief, or the like.
a1300Cursor M. 24646, I languis al for þe.1382Wyclif Song Sol. v. 8, I languysshe for looue.c1386Chaucer Frankl. T. 222 He dorste nat his sorwe telle But langwissheth as a furye dooth in helle.c1400Destr. Troy 9154 Made hym langwys in Loue & Longynges grete.1483Caxton Cato G ij b, Whan the courage languyssheth &..is abandonned to slouthfulnesse.1509Hawes Past. Pleas. xvi. (Percy Soc.) 72 Languysshe no more, but plucke up thyne herte.1562Eden Let. to Sir W. Cecil 1 Aug. in 1st 3 Eng. Bks. Amer. (Arb.) p. xliij, My spirites heretofore no lesse languysshed for lacke of suche a Patrone.1590Shakes. Mids. N. ii. i. 29 Loue and languish for his sake.1604Oth. iii. iii. 43 A man that languishes in your displeasure.1697Dryden Virg. Georg. iii. 334 With two fair Eyes his Mistress burns his Breast; He looks, and languishes, and leaves his Rest.1791Burns Bonie Wee Thing, Wishfully I look and languish In that bonie face o' thine.1844Thirlwall Greece VIII. lxii. 134 The spirit languished as the body decayed.1871R. Ellis tr. Catullus xxxii. 11 A lover Here I languish alone.
b. To waste away with desire or longing for, to pine for. Also const. with inf..
[1611: see 4 a.]1699Relat. Sir T. Morgan's Progr. in Somers Tracts Ser. iv. (1751) III. 160 Major-general Morgan desired the Marshal not to let him languish for Orders.1720Ozell Vertot's Rom. Rep. I. v. 282 The People languished for the Restoration of their Tribunes.1738Wesley Psalms vi. iv, Yet still with never-ceasing Moans I languish for Relief.1791Cowper Iliad ii. 430 What soldier languishes and sighs To leave us?1847De Quincey Sp. Mil. Nun i, The poor nuns, who..were languishing for some amusement.1870Bryant Iliad I. ii. 49 All give way to grief And languish to return.
c. To assume a languid look or expression, as an indication of sorrowful or tender emotion. Also quasi-trans.
1714Mrs. Manley Adv. Rivella 71, I saw his Eyes always fix'd on her with unspeakable Delight, whilst hers languish'd him some returns.1849Thackeray Pendennis lx, When a visitor comes in, she smiles and languishes, you'd think that butter wouldn't melt in her mouth.
4. a. quasi-trans. (usually with out): To pass (a period of time) in languishing.
1611Shakes. Cymb. i. vi. 72 To think that man..will's free houres languish For assured bondage.1683Temple Mem. Wks. 1731 I. 449 He languish'd out the rest of the Summer, and died.1713Addison Cato ii. v, But whilst I live I must not hold my tongue, And languish out old age in his displeasure.1734tr. Rollin's Anc. Hist. xvi. ii. §8. VII. 302 Those who chose rather to destroy one another, than languish out their lives in that miserable manner.
b. causal. To make to languish. Obs. rare.
1575Fenton Gold. Epist. (1582) 222 The displeasures passing in our house pearce deeper, and as a martyr languishe the heart euen vnto death.1603Florio Montaigne iii. v. 529 Least by that jouissance he might or quench, or satisfie, or languish [F. allanguir] that burning flame..wherewith he gloryed.
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