malaise
英 [mælˈeɪz]
美 [mælˈeɪz]
- n. 不舒服;心神不安
- n. (Malaise)人名;(德、瑞典)马莱塞
malaise 不适,不舒服来自古法语malaise,困难,忍受,痛苦,来自mal-,坏的,不良的,aise,轻松,简单,词源同ease,disease.引申词义生病,不适,不舒服。
- malaise
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malaise: see malign
- malaise (n.)
- c. 1300, maleise "pain, suffering; sorrow, anxiety," also, by late 14c., "disease, sickness," from Old French malaise "difficulty, suffering, hardship," literally "ill-ease," from mal "bad" (see mal-) + aise "ease" (see ease (n.)). The current use is perhaps a mid-18c. reborrowing from Modern French. A Middle English verbal form, malasen "to trouble, distress" (mid-15c.), from Old French malaisier, did not endure.
- 1. There is no easy short-term solution to Britain'seconomic malaise.
- 没有什么办法在短期内就可以轻易解决英国的经济问题。
- 2. There is no easy short-term solution to Britain's chronic economic malaise.
- 短期内迅速治愈英国经济顽症的灵丹妙药并不存在。
- 3. Unification has brought soaring unemployment and social malaise.
- 统一导致失业率猛增和社会动荡不安。
- 4. One year after the crash, the markets remain mired in a deep malaise.
- 股市崩盘一年后, 市场仍是萎靡不振.
- 5. He complained of depression, headaches and malaise.
- 他主诉自己情绪低落,头痛且身体不适。