释义 |
fro·zen \ˈfrōzən\ adjective Etymology: Middle English frosen, alteration (influenced by fresen to freeze) of froren, from past participle of fresen to freeze — more at freeze 1. a. : congealed by cold : affected or crusted over by freezing < a frozen brook > b. : subject to frost or to long and severe cold : chilly < the frozen north > c. (1) : clogged with ice < frozen water pipes > (2) : injured or killed by cold < frozen plants > d. : chilled, refrigerated — used of foods prepared for the table < frozen custard > < frozen fruit salad > 2. a. (1) : not susceptible or responsive to feeling : drained or incapable of emotion : benumbed < frozen and bitter and visibly tortured by loneliness — Marcia Davenport > (2) : expressing coldness or unfriendliness : not heartfelt or sincere : impassive, frigid, mechanical, stiff < friends give you that frozen look — Clyde Martin > b. : incapable of being changed, moved, or undone : not subject to change or movement : not flexible, dynamic, or plastic : immobile, rigid, petrified, fixed < in the United States today institutions are not frozen — Zechariah Chafee > < a frozen social system > < stood frozen with terror > < thinks there should be no frozen agenda for any meeting — Kiplinger Washington Letter > specifically : debarred from change in status or from movement by law or other official action < workers are frozen in their jobs for the duration of the war > < prices and wages are frozen for the emergency > c. : not available for present use : not liquid < frozen inventories > < frozen capital > d. of a billiard ball : resting against another ball or a cushion e. : not subject to being taken unless a player holds a pair to match the top card in rank — used of the discard pile in canasta and related games • fro·zen·ly \-ənlē, -li\ adverb • fro·zen·ness \-ən(n)ə̇s\ noun -es |