释义 |
hun·ger I. \ˈhəŋgə(r)\ noun (-s) Etymology: Middle English, from Old English hungor; akin to Old High German hungar hunger, Old Norse hungr, Gothic hūhrus, hunger, Greek kenkei he is hungry, Sanskrit kāṅksati he desires, Lithuanian kanka pain; basic meaning: burning, hurting 1. a. : a craving, desire, or urgent need for food b. : an uneasy sensation occasioned normally by the lack of food and resulting directly from stimulation of the sensory nerves of the stomach by the contraction and churning movement of the empty stomach c. : a weakened disordered condition brought about by prolonged lack of food < die of hunger > 2. : famine < the great hungers and … pestilences of the past — Times Literary Supplement > 3. : a strong desire or craving < a hunger for knowledge > < land hunger > 4. : a craving for or deterioration from lack of a specified substance < potash hunger > — used especially of plants II. verb (hungered ; hungered ; hungering \-g(ə)riŋ\ ; hungers) Etymology: Middle English hungrin, hungeren, from Old English hyngran; akin to Old High German hungaren to hunger, Old Norse hungra, Gothic hungrjan to hunger, Old English hungor, n., hunger intransitive verb 1. : to feel or be oppressed by hunger < the poor hunger, yet are not fed > 2. : to have an eager desire : long < the world today hungers for ideals > transitive verb : to make hungry : force by hunger < the besiegers hungered the garrison into surrender > Synonyms: see long III. noun • - from hunger |