释义 |
WordReference Random House Learner's Dictionary of American English © 2024sen•ti•ment /ˈsɛntəmənt/USA pronunciation n. - a feeling toward something;
opinion: [uncountable]Public sentiment is against taxes.[countable]I agree; those are my sentiments exactly. - refined, delicate, sensitive emotion:[uncountable]You can't allow sentiment to get in the way of business.
See -sent-. WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2024sen•ti•ment (sen′tə mənt),USA pronunciation n. - an attitude toward something;
regard; opinion. - a mental feeling;
emotion:a sentiment of pity. - refined or tender emotion;
manifestation of the higher or more refined feelings. - exhibition or manifestation of feeling or sensibility, or appeal to the tender emotions, in literature, art, or music.
- a thought influenced by or proceeding from feeling or emotion.
- the thought or feeling intended to be conveyed by words, acts, or gestures as distinguished from the words, acts, or gestures themselves.
- Medieval Latin, as above
- Old French
- Medieval Latin sentīmentum, equivalent. to Latin sentī(re) to feel + -mentum -ment; replacing Middle English sentement
- 1325–75
sen′ti•ment•less, adj. - 1.See corresponding entry in Unabridged See opinion.
- 2.See corresponding entry in Unabridged See feeling.
- 3.See corresponding entry in Unabridged Sentiment, sentimentality are terms for sensitiveness to emotional feelings. Sentiment is a sincere and refined sensibility, a tendency to be influenced by emotion rather than reason or fact:to appeal to sentiment.Sentimentality implies affected, excessive, sometimes mawkish sentiment:weak sentimentality.
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