释义 |
empathyem‧pa‧thy /ˈempəθi/ ●○○ noun [uncountable] empathyOrigin: 1900-2000 Greek empatheia, from pathos ‘suffering, feeling’ - And, of course, empathy creates a closeness between you and your child.
- Any practising industrial chemist will have great empathy with this and many other of the author's sentiments.
- As you increase the limit setting, you need to increase your empathy.
- Barriers to empathy are created by some social structures and divisions, such as those of race, religion and class.
- Both authors have the skill to make you feel great empathy with their heroines.
- But the same ability to inspire and persuade through empathy and trust can be and should be present in all organizations.
- One goal in the end is to develop victim empathy.
VERB► feel· Both authors have the skill to make you feel great empathy with their heroines.· They feel empathy for what he felt.· I felt a very real empathy for it.· I understand better now why Dombey and Son should have moved me to such deeply felt empathy for poor Florence!· Perhaps it was wrong to feel empathy with Ruth simply because she too had played truant.· Sometimes I can handle it very well, other times I feel empathy with the gorilla-house on a wet Thursday in February.· He felt the empathy between them. the ability to understand other people’s feelings and problems → sympathyempathy with/for She had great empathy with people.—empathetic /ˌempəˈθetɪk◂/ (also empathic /emˈpəθɪk/) adjective |