释义 |
animusan‧i‧mus /ˈænɪməs/ noun [singular, uncountable] animusOrigin: 1800-1900 Latin ‘spirit, mind, courage, anger’ - At the same time, the incident showed his liability to argue from passion and personal animus to philosophical or political generality.
- For Pound's animus against Virgil was deep-seated and virulent from the first, and it persisted.
- He did not, in any case, have a high opinion of Santayana - an animus which Santayana reciprocated towards Eliot.
- In spite of this, his animus against his father was already diminishing.
- Neither was deterred by the fact that the inevitable visceral animus they are fueling among voters has five more months to fester.
- The novel breathes a certain animus against Jane.
formal a feeling of strong dislike or hatred SYN animosity, hostilityanimus against/towards I have no animus towards Robert. |