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单词 austere
释义

Definition of austere in English:

austere

adjectiveausterest, austerer ɔːˈstɪəɒˈstɪəɔˈstɪr
  • 1Severe or strict in manner or attitude.

    he was an austere man, with a rigidly puritanical outlook
    Example sentencesExamples
    • He seems a somewhat austere and unsympathetic figure and his verses today seem dull and obscure, in translation at least.
    • He is very reserved and austere, just as you would imagine a grand old man of ancient times to be.
    • The last thing I could remember is the physician giving me an anesthetic shot and Matik's austere expression.
    • He looks and sounds every inch the austere, reserved and respected university lecturer that he once was.
    • His cold manner, dogmatic socialism, and austere disposition did not endear him to everyone, least of all to Churchill, but he had a brilliant brain, and was too valuable to lose.
    • He is not magnetic but on the contrary cold and austere.
    • He comes over as a rather serious, studious and austere man, but there is clearly another side to him.
    • Cookie, realizing exactly how her words must have sounded, cracked a smile as well, softening her austere expression somewhat.
    • He is seen, with some justification, as a cold, austere writer, one who belongs to a line that includes Thomas Mann and Samuel Beckett rather than more marketable writers.
    • But I must warn you, once we get past the hallway and into the room, the occupants are rather strict and austere.
    • Ishmael was struck by the man's austere expression.
    • His spokesman says the king is a reserved, austere man.
    • Obvious concern was etched on her face, making it loose its austere quality.
    • Yes, well, it's almost a transformation of these serious and austere people.
    • He was austere, dour, kind, and hard working.
    • Peter expected high standards, but his sometimes austere manner veiled a deep concern for people and an insight into the human condition.
    • He was faulted for refusing to delegate and for favouring incompetent friends, while his austere and overbearing manner led to clashes with state governors and military commanders.
    • Reflects Meyers: ‘Orwell's austere, dour, spartan and ascetic character as well as his tall, gangly figure was more Scottish than English.’
    • An austere and formal man, his affection for his wife and seven living children was minimal.
    • He was gifted with a great sense of humour, and it was unsuspected by those who did not know him really well because of his austere appearance.
    Synonyms
    severe, stern, strict, harsh, unfeeling, stony, steely, flinty, dour, grim, cold, frosty, frigid, icy, chilly, unemotional, unfriendly, formal, stiff, stuffy, reserved, remote, distant, aloof, forbidding, mean-looking, grave, solemn, serious, unsmiling, unsympathetic, unforgiving, uncharitable
    hard, rigorous, stringent, unyielding, unbending, unrelenting, inflexible, illiberal, no-nonsense
    informal hard-boiled, hard-nosed
    Australian/New Zealand informal solid
    1. 1.1 (of living conditions or a way of life) having no comforts or luxuries.
      conditions in the prison could hardly be more austere
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Living conditions, austere at best, included leased warehouses not designed as living quarters or office space.
      • The conditions are austere: one book for ten children, a tiny blackboard and a roof with holes.
      • Everyone likes the warm and comforting feel of the garden - it is not austere.
      • I have lived and worked in austere conditions, lifted and carried heavy equipment and never hesitated to assist in the effort to help the enemy die for their country.
      • The space itself is minimally arranged: it is clinical, but not austere - a type of investigation room.
      • During her month in the 1950s, Hina had to endure strict discipline, austere meals, outdoor swimming and incessant tests.
      • On the other hand William was totally unpretentious and extremely austere in his living arrangements.
      • Justinian led an austere life, working hard for long hours and expecting the same of subordinates.
      • The squadron face austere conditions in the desert, living under canvas.
      • Though he decided against monastic life, he found the austere lifestyle an important model.
      • Discipline will be strict, meals will be austere and she will be allowed to write to her family only once a week.
      • Thank you for publicizing the hard work our Air Force professionals accomplish in such austere conditions.
      • As well, the austere lifestyle chosen by King Ferdinand and his lords could be the medieval equivalent of today's self-improvement craze.
      • But what tempts these youngsters to leave the security of home and lucrative jobs for an austere lifestyle of development work in India?
      • Creatures that occupy the Sonoran Desert have evolved over time to survive under notoriously austere conditions.
      • They were the toilers and savers of the economic miracle generation who forswore luxuries in the austere postwar decades to reserve their place in the sun towards the end of their lives.
      • Hard-edged surfaces can make bathrooms seem cold and austere.
      • A drab, austere society had suddenly been plunged into a more competitive, glamorized world in the 1970s and 1980s.
      • Combining a depressing ending and austere realism with an idealistic, descriptive story is one of Hemingway's particulars of style.
      • ‘He was taken away from his mother and brought up in a cold, austere home with little affection or comfort,’ Cynthia writes.
      Synonyms
      strict, self-denying, self-abnegating, moderate, temperate, sober, simple, frugal, spartan, restrained, self-restrained, self-disciplined, non-indulgent, ascetic, puritanical, self-sacrificing, hair-shirt, abstemious, abstinent, celibate, chaste, continent
      moral, upright
    2. 1.2 Having a plain and unadorned appearance.
      the cathedral is impressive in its austere simplicity
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Bresson developed an austere formalist style that placed him in a pivotal role in the development of modern cinema.
      • There was no simple retreat from austere aristocratic classicism to bourgeois romanticism.
      • He has purchased a wide range of artwork, including colorful, cartoonish prints and wild abstracts framed in austere black mouldings.
      • The interior is breathtakingly austere in appearance; simple but effective use of lighting creates the appropriate atmosphere.
      • It was a gorgeous, awe-inspiring piece of modern machinery - almost Zen-like in its shining simplicity and austere precision.
      • All of this is presented in a style that is both austere and beautiful - plain as can be, yet suffused with an appreciation for artifice as a way of survival.
      • These pieces are austere and unadorned in a way that I'd associate with Shaker simplicity and grace.
      • Like much of the liturgical music of the Orthodox tradition, Tavener's music is intentionally simple and even austere.
      • Presentation is austere: the hardback, which is matt black with silvered lettering, has no dust jacket, no tables, and no illustrations.
      • Here is something designed to be functional and austere.
      • He is the most rigorous, spare, austere of film-makers.
      • Harris's influence, however, isn't apparent in the serious, austere and occasionally beautiful music on this disk.
      • The cathedral, which must have been brilliantly decorated when it was a Catholic place of worship, is very austere in the Reformist manner.
      • On a technical level, the look of the film is deceptively simple and austere.
      • She had no formal training but developed a rigorous, austere style, counter-pointed by a sensuous use of color, which she maintained for many decades.
      • The compound loomed in front of him, the cement walls austere and forbidding.
      • It forcibly reduces this complexity and diversity to an austere homogenous simplicity.
      • At the moment I am considering making my website very austere and plain… you know, seeing that the prints themselves have enough to say without having to compete with the graphics, or something.
      • Church buildings and worship were austere and simple, and the service mainly consisted of lengthy sermons.
      • Mathematics, rightly viewed, possesses not only truth but supreme beauty, a beauty cold and austere like that of sculpture.
      Synonyms
      plain, simple, basic, functional, modest, unadorned, undecorated, unornamented, unembellished, unostentatious, unfurnished, uncluttered, unfussy, without frills, subdued, muted, restrained
      stark, bleak, bare, bald, clinical, sombre, severe, spartan, ascetic
      informal no frills

Derivatives

  • austerely

  • adverb ɔːˈstɪəliɒˈstɪəliɔˈstɪrli
    • His status among the people was consolidated by his lifestyle - he lived austerely, and never married.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • If you happen to forget your novel, you can quite happily while away the hours drinking in this austerely beautiful scenery.
      • One is an academic who lives austerely - perhaps too austerely - the other a corporate whiz.
      • ‘I'll give you a week, Colin,’ Sam said austerely, ‘And you better have your answer by then.’
      • It is austerely modernist, making little concession to either plot or character, more like a fictive sculpture than a story, an obsessively repeated series of patterns.
      • His early works are romantic treatments of subjects from Ovid and Tasso; later he developed an austerely classical style.

Origin

Middle English: via Old French from Latin austerus, from Greek austēros 'severe'.

Rhymes

adhere, Agadir, Anglosphere, appear, arrear, auctioneer, balladeer, bandolier, Bashkir, beer, besmear, bier, blear, bombardier, brigadier, buccaneer, cameleer, career, cashier, cavalier, chandelier, charioteer, cheer, chevalier, chiffonier, clavier, clear, Coetzee, cohere, commandeer, conventioneer, Cordelier, corsetière, Crimea, dear, deer, diarrhoea (US diarrhea), domineer, Dorothea, drear, ear, electioneer, emir, endear, engineer, fear, fleer, Freer, fusilier, gadgeteer, Galatea, gazetteer, gear, gondolier, gonorrhoea (US gonorrhea), Greer, grenadier, hand-rear, hear, here, Hosea, idea, interfere, Izmir, jeer, Judaea, Kashmir, Keir, kir, Korea, Lear, leer, Maria, marketeer, Medea, Meir, Melilla, mere, Mia, Mir, mishear, mountaineer, muleteer, musketeer, mutineer, near, orienteer, pamphleteer, panacea, paneer, peer, persevere, pier, Pierre, pioneer, pistoleer, privateer, profiteer, puppeteer, racketeer, ratafia, rear, revere, rhea, rocketeer, Sapir, scrutineer, sear, seer, sere, severe, Shamir, shear, sheer, sincere, smear, sneer, sonneteer, souvenir, spear, sphere, steer, stere, summiteer, Tangier, tear, tier, Trier, Tyr, veer, veneer, Vere, Vermeer, vizier, volunteer, Wear, weir, we're, year, Zaïre
 
 

Definition of austere in US English:

austere

adjectiveôˈstirɔˈstɪr
  • 1Severe or strict in manner, attitude, or appearance.

    an austere man, with a rigidly puritanical outlook
    an austere expression
    Example sentencesExamples
    • The last thing I could remember is the physician giving me an anesthetic shot and Matik's austere expression.
    • He comes over as a rather serious, studious and austere man, but there is clearly another side to him.
    • He looks and sounds every inch the austere, reserved and respected university lecturer that he once was.
    • Reflects Meyers: ‘Orwell's austere, dour, spartan and ascetic character as well as his tall, gangly figure was more Scottish than English.’
    • Yes, well, it's almost a transformation of these serious and austere people.
    • His cold manner, dogmatic socialism, and austere disposition did not endear him to everyone, least of all to Churchill, but he had a brilliant brain, and was too valuable to lose.
    • Obvious concern was etched on her face, making it loose its austere quality.
    • Cookie, realizing exactly how her words must have sounded, cracked a smile as well, softening her austere expression somewhat.
    • He was faulted for refusing to delegate and for favouring incompetent friends, while his austere and overbearing manner led to clashes with state governors and military commanders.
    • Peter expected high standards, but his sometimes austere manner veiled a deep concern for people and an insight into the human condition.
    • An austere and formal man, his affection for his wife and seven living children was minimal.
    • He seems a somewhat austere and unsympathetic figure and his verses today seem dull and obscure, in translation at least.
    • Ishmael was struck by the man's austere expression.
    • He was austere, dour, kind, and hard working.
    • He is very reserved and austere, just as you would imagine a grand old man of ancient times to be.
    • He was gifted with a great sense of humour, and it was unsuspected by those who did not know him really well because of his austere appearance.
    • But I must warn you, once we get past the hallway and into the room, the occupants are rather strict and austere.
    • His spokesman says the king is a reserved, austere man.
    • He is seen, with some justification, as a cold, austere writer, one who belongs to a line that includes Thomas Mann and Samuel Beckett rather than more marketable writers.
    • He is not magnetic but on the contrary cold and austere.
    Synonyms
    severe, stern, strict, harsh, unfeeling, stony, steely, flinty, dour, grim, cold, frosty, frigid, icy, chilly, unemotional, unfriendly, formal, stiff, stuffy, reserved, remote, distant, aloof, forbidding, mean-looking, grave, solemn, serious, unsmiling, unsympathetic, unforgiving, uncharitable
    1. 1.1 (of living conditions or a way of life) having no comforts or luxuries; harsh or ascetic.
      conditions in the prison could hardly be more austere
      Example sentencesExamples
      • A drab, austere society had suddenly been plunged into a more competitive, glamorized world in the 1970s and 1980s.
      • Justinian led an austere life, working hard for long hours and expecting the same of subordinates.
      • Living conditions, austere at best, included leased warehouses not designed as living quarters or office space.
      • Everyone likes the warm and comforting feel of the garden - it is not austere.
      • They were the toilers and savers of the economic miracle generation who forswore luxuries in the austere postwar decades to reserve their place in the sun towards the end of their lives.
      • The conditions are austere: one book for ten children, a tiny blackboard and a roof with holes.
      • But what tempts these youngsters to leave the security of home and lucrative jobs for an austere lifestyle of development work in India?
      • Creatures that occupy the Sonoran Desert have evolved over time to survive under notoriously austere conditions.
      • Discipline will be strict, meals will be austere and she will be allowed to write to her family only once a week.
      • On the other hand William was totally unpretentious and extremely austere in his living arrangements.
      • I have lived and worked in austere conditions, lifted and carried heavy equipment and never hesitated to assist in the effort to help the enemy die for their country.
      • Thank you for publicizing the hard work our Air Force professionals accomplish in such austere conditions.
      • The space itself is minimally arranged: it is clinical, but not austere - a type of investigation room.
      • ‘He was taken away from his mother and brought up in a cold, austere home with little affection or comfort,’ Cynthia writes.
      • Though he decided against monastic life, he found the austere lifestyle an important model.
      • The squadron face austere conditions in the desert, living under canvas.
      • As well, the austere lifestyle chosen by King Ferdinand and his lords could be the medieval equivalent of today's self-improvement craze.
      • Hard-edged surfaces can make bathrooms seem cold and austere.
      • Combining a depressing ending and austere realism with an idealistic, descriptive story is one of Hemingway's particulars of style.
      • During her month in the 1950s, Hina had to endure strict discipline, austere meals, outdoor swimming and incessant tests.
      Synonyms
      strict, self-denying, self-abnegating, moderate, temperate, sober, simple, frugal, spartan, restrained, self-restrained, self-disciplined, non-indulgent, ascetic, puritanical, self-sacrificing, hair-shirt, abstemious, abstinent, celibate, chaste, continent
    2. 1.2 Having an extremely plain and simple style or appearance; unadorned.
      the cathedral is impressive in its austere simplicity
      Example sentencesExamples
      • There was no simple retreat from austere aristocratic classicism to bourgeois romanticism.
      • The compound loomed in front of him, the cement walls austere and forbidding.
      • All of this is presented in a style that is both austere and beautiful - plain as can be, yet suffused with an appreciation for artifice as a way of survival.
      • It was a gorgeous, awe-inspiring piece of modern machinery - almost Zen-like in its shining simplicity and austere precision.
      • Harris's influence, however, isn't apparent in the serious, austere and occasionally beautiful music on this disk.
      • She had no formal training but developed a rigorous, austere style, counter-pointed by a sensuous use of color, which she maintained for many decades.
      • Bresson developed an austere formalist style that placed him in a pivotal role in the development of modern cinema.
      • The interior is breathtakingly austere in appearance; simple but effective use of lighting creates the appropriate atmosphere.
      • At the moment I am considering making my website very austere and plain… you know, seeing that the prints themselves have enough to say without having to compete with the graphics, or something.
      • These pieces are austere and unadorned in a way that I'd associate with Shaker simplicity and grace.
      • The cathedral, which must have been brilliantly decorated when it was a Catholic place of worship, is very austere in the Reformist manner.
      • Mathematics, rightly viewed, possesses not only truth but supreme beauty, a beauty cold and austere like that of sculpture.
      • He is the most rigorous, spare, austere of film-makers.
      • On a technical level, the look of the film is deceptively simple and austere.
      • Like much of the liturgical music of the Orthodox tradition, Tavener's music is intentionally simple and even austere.
      • It forcibly reduces this complexity and diversity to an austere homogenous simplicity.
      • Here is something designed to be functional and austere.
      • Church buildings and worship were austere and simple, and the service mainly consisted of lengthy sermons.
      • He has purchased a wide range of artwork, including colorful, cartoonish prints and wild abstracts framed in austere black mouldings.
      • Presentation is austere: the hardback, which is matt black with silvered lettering, has no dust jacket, no tables, and no illustrations.
      Synonyms
      plain, simple, basic, functional, modest, unadorned, undecorated, unornamented, unembellished, unostentatious, unfurnished, uncluttered, unfussy, without frills, subdued, muted, restrained
    3. 1.3 (of an economic policy or measure) designed to reduce a budget deficit, especially by cutting public expenditure.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The net result is that public support for governmental austere economic policies has been questionable.
      • The budget - the most austere of Bush's presidency - would eliminate or vastly scale back 150 government programs.
      • What may have compelled such austere policies?
      • He also surprised his listeners by proposing an austere economic policy that would keep interest rates at levels as high as needed to control the growing inflation.
      • Even rich countries like Canada have been forced to adopt austere budget policies to cope with currency-induced turmoil.
      • This resulted, uniformly, in austere macroeconomic policies that emphasized liberalization, export orientation, and an end to social subsidies.
      • School districts have a finite amount of resources - resources which are especially limited in fiscally austere times like our current recession.
      • The marketing budget is also necessarily austere, but at least it is cheap in a creative way.
      • But he insisted that he was trying to return to the traditions of Gladstone's austere Victorian budgets - fairer and simpler taxes, and tight control on spending.
      • Here in Brazil, he has defended austere monetary and fiscal policies, and externally he is seen as the champion of the poor.
      • What we want is abundant savings and investment in private enterprises, and a lean, austere, low-budget, minimal government.
      • We inherited those austere policies and the consequences of them.
      • Employment with a foreign aid agency became the best way to earn a substantial salary in a competitive and still austere economy.

Origin

Middle English: via Old French from Latin austerus, from Greek austēros ‘severe’.

 
 
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更新时间:2024/12/23 1:46:39