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单词 hallucinate
释义

hallucinatev.

/haˈl(j)uːsɪneɪt/
Etymology: < past participial stem of Latin (h)allūcinārī (more correctly ālūcinārī), to wander in mind, talk idly, prate. Compare French halluciner.
1. transitive. To deceive. Obsolete. rare.Apparently only attested in dictionaries or glossaries.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > deceit, deception, trickery > deceive [verb (transitive)]
aschrenchc885
blendc888
swikec950
belirtOE
beswike971
blencha1000
blenka1000
belieOE
becatchc1175
trokec1175
beguile?c1225
biwrench?c1225
guile?c1225
trechec1230
unordainc1300
blink1303
deceivec1320
feintc1330
trechetc1330
misusea1382
blind1382
forgo1382
beglose1393
troil1393
turnc1405
lirt?a1425
abuse?a1439
ludify1447
amuse1480
wilec1480
trump1487
delude?a1505
sile1508
betrumpa1522
blear1530
aveugle1543
mislippen1552
pot1560
disglose1565
oversile1568
blaze1570
blirre1570
bleck1573
overtake1581
fail1590
bafflea1592
blanch1592
geck?a1600
hallucinate1604
hoodwink1610
intrigue1612
guggle1617
nigglea1625
nose-wipe1628
cog1629
cheat1637
flam1637
nurse1639
jilt1660
top1663
chaldese1664
bilk1672
bejuggle1680
nuzzlec1680
snub1694
bite1709
nebus1712
fugle1719
to take in1740
have?1780
quirk1791
rum1812
rattlesnake1818
chicane1835
to suck in1842
mogue1854
blinker1865
to have on1867
mag1869
sleight1876
bumfuzzle1878
swop1890
wool1890
spruce1917
jive1928
shit1934
smokescreen1950
dick1964
1604 R. Cawdrey Table Alphabet. Hallucinate, to deceiue, or blind.
1623 H. Cockeram Eng. Dict. Hallucinate, to deceiue.
2. intransitive. To be deceived, suffer illusion, entertain false notions, blunder, mistake. Also, to have a hallucination or hallucinations. Now chiefly U.S.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > perception or cognition > faculty of imagination > fancy or fantastic notion > deceptive fancy or illusion > suffer illusion [verb (intransitive)]
hallucinate1652
the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > disregard for truth, falsehood > lack of truth, falsity > be mistaken, err [verb (intransitive)]
dwelec900
haltc900
marOE
slidea1000
misfangOE
missOE
to have wough?c1225
misnimc1225
misrekec1275
mis-startc1275
err1303
to go wrongc1340
misgo1340
slipc1340
snapperc1380
forvay1390
to miss of ——c1395
to make a balkc1430
to run in ——1496
trip1509
fault1530
mistake1548
misreckon1584
misstep1605
warpa1616
solecize1627
hallucinate1652
nod1677
to go will1724
to fare astray (misliche, amiss)a1849
slip1890
skid1920
the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > deceit, deception, trickery > deception by illusion, delusion > delude [verb (intransitive)] > be deluded
to lie in the lash1573
to have found (also spied) a mare's nest1576
overtake1581
hallucinate1652
mare's-nest1859
to get left1884
the world > physical sensation > physical sensibility > aberrant sensory perception > experience aberrant sensory perception [verb (intransitive)]
hallucinate1930
the world > health and disease > mental health > mental illness > degree or type of mental illness > [verb (intransitive)] > hallucinate
to see things1904
hallucinate1930
1652 J. Gaule Πυς-μαντια 88 If Prognosticators have so often hallucinated..about naturall effects.
1666 G. Harvey Morbus Anglicus ix. 75 Physicians do extreamly hallucinate in the discern of their causes.
1751 W. Warburton in Wks. of Alexander Pope III. 287 It is no wonder that the verbal criticks should a little hallucinate in this matter.
1841 T. Carlyle On Heroes v. 311 The man who cannot think and see; but only grope, and hallucinate, and missee the nature of the thing.
1847 Webster's Amer. Dict. Eng. Lang. Hallucinate.
1930 C. E. Spearman Creative Mind x. 135 A man hallucinated that the clothes of the girls ‘flew off them’.
1958 E. Dundy Dud Avocado iii. vi. 270 My first thought was that I had gone stark raving mad..and that I was now hallucinating in a looney bin.
1964 ‘A. Cross’ In last Analysis iii. 31 Had such an idea crossed her mind, Kate would have decided that..she was ‘hallucinating’.
1973 Publishers Weekly 19 Mar. 61/3 He describes her and is told, bluntly, that he is hallucinating.
3. transitive. To affect with hallucination; to produce false impressions or perceptions in the mind of.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > physical sensibility > aberrant sensory perception > cause aberrant sensory perception [verb (transitive)]
hallucinate1834
the world > health and disease > mental health > mental illness > degree or type of mental illness > [verb (transitive)] > affect with hallucination
hallucinate1834
the mind > mental capacity > perception or cognition > faculty of imagination > fancy or fantastic notion > deceptive fancy or illusion > produce illusions [verb (transitive)]
to conjure up1600
hallucinate1834
1834 S. Cooper Good's Study Med. (ed. 4) III. 112 Pascal himself was..so hallucinated with hypochondrism as to believe that he was always on the verge of an abyss.
1877 F. C. L. Wraxall tr. V. Hugo Les Misérables i. iv The scaffold..has something about it that hallucinates.

Derivatives

haˈllucinated adj.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > physical sensibility > aberrant sensory perception > [adjective] > experiencing hallucination
hallucinatinga1763
hallucinated1886
hallucinant1895
the world > health and disease > mental health > mental illness > degree or type of mental illness > [adjective] > hallucination
Corybantic1642
Corybantine1708
hallucinatinga1763
hallucinatory1830
Corybantian1864
hallucinative1873
hallucinated1886
bisensory1894
hallucinant1895
the mind > mental capacity > perception or cognition > faculty of imagination > fancy or fantastic notion > deceptive fancy or illusion > [adjective] > hallucination > experiencing
hallucinatinga1763
hallucinative1873
hallucinated1886
hallucinant1895
1886 E. Gurney et al. Phantasms of Living I. 461 The hallucinated person..imagined [etc.].
1892 A. B. Bruce Apologetics Introd. 27 It may be mistaken hallucinated conviction.
haˈllucinating adj.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > physical sensibility > aberrant sensory perception > [adjective] > experiencing hallucination
hallucinatinga1763
hallucinated1886
hallucinant1895
the world > health and disease > mental health > mental illness > degree or type of mental illness > [adjective] > hallucination
Corybantic1642
Corybantine1708
hallucinatinga1763
hallucinatory1830
Corybantian1864
hallucinative1873
hallucinated1886
bisensory1894
hallucinant1895
the mind > mental capacity > perception or cognition > faculty of imagination > fancy or fantastic notion > deceptive fancy or illusion > [adjective] > hallucination > experiencing
hallucinatinga1763
hallucinative1873
hallucinated1886
hallucinant1895
the world > physical sensation > physical sensibility > aberrant sensory perception > [adjective] > producing hallucination
hallucinative1873
hallucinating1903
hallucinant1932
a1763 J. Byrom Epist. to Friend in Poems (1894–5) I. ii. 505 Some poor hallucinating Scribe's Mistake.
1903 E. Wharton Sanctuary ii. iv. 137 That hallucinating distinctness which belongs to the midnight vision.
1966 New Statesman 18 Feb. 233/2 Jennifer Dawson writes about the surface pain of living—with hallucinating effect.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1898; most recently modified version published online June 2021).
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更新时间:2024/12/24 11:21:07