释义 |
trancetrance /trɑːns $ træns/ noun tranceOrigin: 1300-1400 Old French transe, from transir ‘to pass away, become unconscious’, from Latin transire; ➔ TRANSIENT1 - At least Jenny had known that she would be either drunk or in a state of trance.
- At once the two of them fall into a kind of trance.
- Finally I shook myself out of my trance and rolled over on the cot, facing away from her.
- He looked stunned, almost in a trance, but he soon regained his composure.
- Snapping out of his brief trance, Mungo supposed Stanley was relieved that at least the shop had survived the flood.
- The channeler goes into a trance and summons spirits, who either talk through the channeler or appear directly to those present.
► Psychology/Psychiatryagoraphobia, nounagoraphobic, noun-aholic, suffixanalyse, verbanalysis, nounanalyst, nounanorexia, nounantidepressant, nounautism, nounbattle fatigue, nounbehaviourism, nounbreakdown, nounbulimia, nouncatharsis, nouncertify, verbclaustrophobia, nouncognition, nouncognitive, adjectivecomplex, nouncompulsive, adjectivecounsel, verbcounselling, nouncrazed, adjectivecrazy, adjectivedefence mechanism, noundelusion, noundemented, adjectivedementia, noundenial, noundepressed, adjectivedepression, noundepressive, adjectivedepressive, nounderanged, adjectivediminished responsibility, noundipsomaniac, noundisordered, adjectivedisturbance, noundysfunctional, adjectiveeating disorder, nouneccentricity, nounego, nounelectric shock therapy, nounemotional, adjectiveexhibitionism, nounextra-sensory perception, nounfixation, nounFreudian, adjectiveFreudian slip, noungroup therapy, nounhallucinate, verbhydrophobia, nounhypnosis, nounhypnotic, adjectivehypnotise, verbhypnotist, nounhypnotize, verbid, nouninferiority complex, nouninsane, adjectiveinsanity, nounkleptomania, nounkleptomaniac, nounlibido, nounlinear, adjectivemaladjusted, adjectivemania, nounmanic, adjectivemanic depression, nounmanic depressive, nounmental, adjectivemental age, nounmental hospital, nounmentally handicapped, adjectivemidlife crisis, nounmisogynist, nounmixed up, adjectivenerve, nounnervous, adjectivenervous breakdown, nounnervous system, nounneural, adjectiveneuro-, prefixneurology, nounneurosis, nounneurotic, adjectiveobsessive, nounoedipal, adjectiveOedipus complex, nounpadded cell, nounparanoia, nounparanoid, adjectivepathological, adjectivepathology, nounpatterning, nounphallic, adjectivephobia, noun-phobia, suffixphrenology, nounpost-traumatic stress disorder, nounprecognition, nounpsyche, nounpsychiatric, adjectivepsychiatrist, nounpsychiatry, nounpsychic, adjectivepsycho, nounpsycho-, prefixpsychoanalysis, nounpsychoanalyst, nounpsychoanalyze, verbpsychobabble, nounpsychodrama, nounpsychokinesis, nounpsychological, adjectivepsychologist, nounpsychology, nounpsychopath, nounpsychosis, nounpsychosomatic, adjectivepsychotherapy, nounpsychotic, adjectivepyromaniac, nounrepression, nounresidential treatment facility, nounRorschach test, nounsadism, nounsadist, nounsafety valve, nounsanity, nounscar, nounscar, verbschizoid, adjectiveschizophrenia, nounschizophrenic, adjectiveschizophrenic, nounscrewed up, adjectivesocialize, verbsociopath, nounsplit personality, nounsubconscious, adjectivesubconscious, nounsuggestion, nounsuperego, nountherapy, nountorment, nountrance, nountrauma, nounvoyeur, nounwell-adjusted, adjective ► go/fall into a trance She went into a deep hypnotic trance. ► catatonic stupor/tranceVERB► fall· Breathe the air and you fall into a trance.· She decides to weave the most beautiful blanket in the world and falls into a trance.· In 1656 she revisited Cornwall and, from August 1657 to mid-1658, she fell into another trance, avoiding further arrest.· After school she went to do her chores, but soon fell into her customary trance of curiosity. ► go· When he did sleep, he simply went into a trance for five minutes.· Towards the front, some of the men had gone into trance, waiting for the goddess to possess them.· Sometimes he went into a trance.· The channeler goes into a trance and summons spirits, who either talk through the channeler or appear directly to those present.· Some of them had gone into trances, and questions were asked by many worried parents. 1[countable] a state in which you behave as if you were asleep but are still able to hear and understand what is said to yougo/fall into a trance She went into a deep hypnotic trance.2[countable] a state in which you are thinking about something so much that you do not notice what is happening around youin a trance What’s the matter with you? You’ve been in a trance all day.3[uncountable] a type of popular electronic dance music with a fast beat and long continuous notes played on a synthesizer |