| 释义 | admireadmire /ədˈmaɪɚ/ ●●● S3 W2 verb [transitive not in progressive] ETYMOLOGYadmireOrigin: 1500-1600 French admirer, from  Latin admirari, from  ad- to +  mirari to wonder VERB TABLEadmire |
 | Present | I, you, we, they | admire |  |  | he, she, it | admires |  | Past | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | admired |  | Present perfect | I, you, we, they | have admired |  |  | he, she, it | has admired |  | Past perfect | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | had admired |  | Future | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | will admire |  | Future perfect | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | will have admired | 
► admire the way I admire the way Miller handled the controversy.► admire the view  We stopped halfway up the hill to admire the view. THESAURUSto have a very high opinion of someone because he or she has good qualities or has done good or impressive things► admire1to have a very high opinion of someone because he or she has good qualities or has done good or impressive things:  We all admire the troops’ bravery.admire somebody for something They admired her for having the courage to tell the truth. I admire the way Miller handled the controversy.THESAURUSrespect – to have a good opinion of someone because he or she has knowledge, skill, or good personal qualities:  He is a very strict teacher, but the students respect him.look up to somebody – to admire and respect someone who is older or who has more experience than you:  He looks up to his older brother and wants to become a soldier too.idolize – to admire someone so much that you think he or she is perfect:  He now plays on the same team as the players he idolized while he was still in high school.worship – to admire and love someone very much:  Dan’s son just worships his father.revere formal – to respect and admire someone or something very much:  As a civil rights leader, Martin Luther King, Jr. was revered for his courage and leadership.hold somebody in high esteem formal – to respect and admire someone a lot:  Her colleagues held her in high esteem.2to look at something and think how beautiful or impressive it is:  We stopped halfway up the hill to admire the view.3admire somebody from afar old-fashioned to be attracted to someone, without telling that person how you feel [Origin: 1500–1600 French admirer, from  Latin admirari, from  ad- to +  mirari to wonder]—admiring adjective—admiringly adverbto have a very high opinion of someone because he or she has good qualities or has done good or impressive things:  We all admire the troops’ bravery. I admire the way Miller handled the controversy.► respect  to have a good opinion of someone because he or she has knowledge, skill, or good personal qualities:  He is a very strict teacher, but the students respect him.► look up to somebody  to admire and respect someone who is older or who has more experience than you:  He looks up to his older brother and wants to become a soldier too.► idolize  to admire someone so much that you think he or she is perfect:  He now plays on the same team as the players he idolized while he was still in high school.► worship  to admire and love someone very much:  Dan’s son just worships his father.► revere  formal to respect and admire someone or something very much:  As a civil rights leader, Martin Luther King, Jr. was revered for his courage and leadership.► hold somebody in high esteem  formal to respect and admire someone a lot:  Her colleagues held her in high esteem. |