释义 |
anathemaa‧nath‧e‧ma /əˈnæθəmə/ noun [singular, uncountable] formal anathemaOrigin: 1500-1600 Late Latin, Greek, ‘thing given over to evil, curse’, from anatithenai ‘to set up, dedicate’ - Cutting back on any government service is still anathema to liberals.
- For a long time dispersal of any book from a public library was considered anathema.
- Self-sufficiency is anathema to capitalism and, despite the already mentioned exhortations, is not what is required.
- Smothering the world with efficient carbon sink plantings, such as eucalyptus and genetically modified poplar, is an anathema.
- Specialists and careful empathic care are anathema to the bottom line, the chief concern of the managed-care companies.
- That would have been anathema to Taylor and earned his contempt.
- The notion that an enzyme might exist in a number of forms decided purely on probability is anathema to many scientists.
- The word profit is anathema to traditional governments, of course.
something that is completely the opposite of what you believe inanathema to His political views were anathema to me. |