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单词 froideur
释义

Definition of froideur in English:

froideur

nounfrwʌˈdəːfʀwadœʀfrwäˈdər
mass noun
  • Coolness or reserve between people.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • By the simple expedient of renting a lovely French aristocrat, the froideur turns to fun, and the surly city becomes all smiles and elegance.
    • Mother and son were treated with rigid froideur at the funeral.
    • Kerry's personal froideur can't have been the single cause of the upset.
    • Quite what it has done to deserve this ministerial froideur is hard to explain, but the alienation is almost palpable and something must be done to change things.
    • There was none of the froideur of Princess Margaret or the remoteness of Princess Anne but no one ever in her company forgot who she was.
    • I've long detected a certain froideur in these pages for the industry that dare not speak its name.
    • She was initially friendly, but I felt a sudden froideur when I explained that I was writing about the difficulty of remaking your life outside parliament.
    • Subsequently, for some reason that Piers couldn't fathom, a froideur set in.
    • For the Brown camp, however, the reasons for the froideur are clear, and traced meticulously back 20 years, during a meeting in a Soho restaurant when Brown was preparing to run for the chairmanship of the Scottish Labour party.
    • Whether Downing Street's froideur is a harbinger of continuing non-co-operation with Bute House remains to be seen.
    • But she negotiates its vocal awkwardness capably, and supplies much of the character's blend of hauteur, froideur and directness.
    • The froideur of their sexual union is the crucible for an intense, devastating story of non - communication, unvoiced desires and pitiful vulnerability.
    • He carried off the stiff, tormented froideur that makes the character both crucial and problematic in Ulysses.
    • Christopher and Peter didn't speak for four years between 9/11 and the 2005 Hay Festival, and last night there was still evidence of froideur.
    • There was something of a froideur between us, dating from an occasion a few years earlier when Sue had caught me sniggering over one of her class work sheets.
    • Her reputation for froideur has dogged her for years, along with her earnestness on the topic of herself.
    • After decades of respectful froideur, the country has fallen madly in love with that unflinching emblem of postwar stoicism, the Queen.
    • Dan is decrying the froideur of southern audiences.
    • When Sumner gets it right, his understatement and blokeish froideur are one of New Order's greatest strengths.
    • Ultimately, it remains difficult to sustain the comparison between Hart's myopic, young-man-in-a-hurry and the aloof master of Avondale who declined Gladstone's version of an Irish constitution with astonishing froideur in the late 1880s.
    Synonyms
    reticence, self-restraint, restraint, self-containment

Origin

French, from froid 'cold'.

 
 

Definition of froideur in US English:

froideur

nounfrwäˈdər
  • Coolness or reserve between people.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Christopher and Peter didn't speak for four years between 9/11 and the 2005 Hay Festival, and last night there was still evidence of froideur.
    • The froideur of their sexual union is the crucible for an intense, devastating story of non - communication, unvoiced desires and pitiful vulnerability.
    • Ultimately, it remains difficult to sustain the comparison between Hart's myopic, young-man-in-a-hurry and the aloof master of Avondale who declined Gladstone's version of an Irish constitution with astonishing froideur in the late 1880s.
    • There was none of the froideur of Princess Margaret or the remoteness of Princess Anne but no one ever in her company forgot who she was.
    • She was initially friendly, but I felt a sudden froideur when I explained that I was writing about the difficulty of remaking your life outside parliament.
    • Her reputation for froideur has dogged her for years, along with her earnestness on the topic of herself.
    • Kerry's personal froideur can't have been the single cause of the upset.
    • Quite what it has done to deserve this ministerial froideur is hard to explain, but the alienation is almost palpable and something must be done to change things.
    • For the Brown camp, however, the reasons for the froideur are clear, and traced meticulously back 20 years, during a meeting in a Soho restaurant when Brown was preparing to run for the chairmanship of the Scottish Labour party.
    • Whether Downing Street's froideur is a harbinger of continuing non-co-operation with Bute House remains to be seen.
    • He carried off the stiff, tormented froideur that makes the character both crucial and problematic in Ulysses.
    • By the simple expedient of renting a lovely French aristocrat, the froideur turns to fun, and the surly city becomes all smiles and elegance.
    • After decades of respectful froideur, the country has fallen madly in love with that unflinching emblem of postwar stoicism, the Queen.
    • Mother and son were treated with rigid froideur at the funeral.
    • When Sumner gets it right, his understatement and blokeish froideur are one of New Order's greatest strengths.
    • Dan is decrying the froideur of southern audiences.
    • There was something of a froideur between us, dating from an occasion a few years earlier when Sue had caught me sniggering over one of her class work sheets.
    • I've long detected a certain froideur in these pages for the industry that dare not speak its name.
    • But she negotiates its vocal awkwardness capably, and supplies much of the character's blend of hauteur, froideur and directness.
    • Subsequently, for some reason that Piers couldn't fathom, a froideur set in.
    Synonyms
    reticence, self-restraint, restraint, self-containment

Origin

French, from froid ‘cold’.

 
 
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