| 单词 | malaise |
| 释义 | malaise From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary EnglishIllness & disabilitymalaisema‧laise /məˈleɪz, mæ-/ noun [singular, uncountable] formal1 WORRIEDa general problem that is difficult to describe in an exact waya general malaise within society2 MIa general feeling that you are slightly ill or not happy in your lifeExamples from the Corpusmalaise• The first sign of illness is a malaise no worse than influenza.• It is a malaise that affects both intellectuals and the masses.• There is a restlessness, a malaise, among the workers.• economic malaise• These include general malaise, vision problems, and increases in anxiety and insomnia.• They can also help a floundering organization extricate itself from the depths of a self-inflicted malaise.• Many wanted to share their strange feelings of malaise.• Conversely, when a nation begins to see itself historically and destroys its mythology, the result is secularization and spiritual malaise.• The malaise had spread countrywide however.Origin malaise (1700-1800) French mal- ( → MAL-) + aise “comfort” |
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