单词 | whimper | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
释义 | whimperwhim‧per /ˈwɪmpə $ -ər/ verb [intransitive, transitive] Word Origin WORD ORIGINwhimper Verb TableOrigin: 1500-1600 From the soundVERB TABLE whimper
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER DICTIONARIES Thesaurus
THESAURUS► cry to make low crying sounds, or to speak in this way: He heard the dog whimper. ‘It’s not my fault,’ she whimpered.► see thesaurus at cry—whimper noun [countable] to produce tears from your eyes: · Don’t cry – everything will be all right!· Men aren’t supposed to cry. ► cry your eyes out especially spoken to cry a lot and for a long time: · I cried my eyes out when I watched ‘Titanic’. ► be in tears to be crying: · By the end of his story, we were all in tears. ► be close to tears to be almost crying: · You could see that she was close to tears. ► weep literary to cry, especially for a long time: · His mother put her head on the table and wept. ► sob to cry, taking sudden loud breaths: · I could hear someone sobbing in the next room. ► wail to cry very loudly in a high voice: · The baby started wailing for its mother. ► whimper to cry quietly and weakly: · She began rocking to and fro, whimpering softly. ► hold/fight back the tears to make a big effort not to cry: · She told her story, struggling to hold back the tears. ► your eyes water if your eyes water, they have tears in them, for example because of smoke, wind, or when you are cutting onions: · The onions were making my eyes water. Longman Language Activatorto cry► cry if you cry , tears come from your eyes, for example because you are sad or upset, or because you have hurt yourself: · I could hear the baby crying in the next room.· Kim's eyes were red and she looked as though she'd been crying.· Don't cry, I didn't mean to upset you.cry about: · Jenny won't tell me what she's crying about.make somebody cry: · The film was so sad, it made me cry.cry and cry (=cry for a long time): · I sat alone in my room and cried and cried.cry your eyes out (=cry a lot because you are very upset): · The poor kid's so miserable, he's upstairs crying his eyes out.cry with happiness/joy/relief etc: · She cried with joy when she heard that the children were safe.cry yourself to sleep (=cry until you fall asleep): · At night I'd cry myself to sleep, thinking about you. ► weep especially written to cry quietly and for a long time because you are very sad or you feel a strong emotion: · She sat beside her dying father and wept.weep openly (=without trying to stop or hide it): · Thousands of French citizens, many weeping openly, bade a silent farewell to Mitterand.weep with emotion/grief/joy etc: · I remember weeping with pride when my first son was born.weep bitterly (=cry strongly): · His mother wept bitterly and his father sat grim-faced. ► sob if you sob , you cry noisily and your body shakes, because you are very sad or because someone has upset you: · The sound of her sobbing kept them awake all night.· "Please don't leave me," he sobbed.· The child covered her face with her hands and started to sob uncontrollably. ► bawl to cry loudly - use this especially about young children or people you do not have any sympathy for: · "Stop, bawling," Dad said crossly, "and come over here."· The baby was sitting in his high chair, red in the face and bawling. ► snivel/sniffle to cry in a weak, complaining way and at the same time breathe in air noisily through your nose: · "What are you snivelling about, Jake?'· She kept sniffling into her handkerchief and saying how unfair everything was. ► whimper to make a quiet, continuous, unhappy sound like an animal in pain, or to say something with this sound in your voice: · 'I'm sorry,' she whimpered, but Richard wasn't listening.whimper with: · Pat whimpered with the pain of the bullet wound in his shoulder. ► be in tears crying because someone has upset you, or because something is very sad: · Everyone started to laugh and Frank ran out of the room in tears.· Most of us were in tears by the time he'd finished his story. ► your eyes water if your eyes water , you have tears in your eyes, usually because of something such as wind or smoke going into them: · Jo's eyes were watering from the smoke that filled the room.make your eyes water: · An icy wind blew into my face, making my eyes water. ► tears drops of water that come from your eyes when you are crying - this is often used to represent the idea of crying: · Grandpa wiped the tears from his eyes.have tears in your eyes/with tears in your eyes (=be nearly crying): · Yusuf had tears in his eyes, and I knew he was thinking of home.· She turned to me with tears in her eyes and begged me to help her.tears roll/run down somebody's cheeks (=someone cries a lot): · He stood silently, tears rolling down his cheeks, while the music played.· Mum showed us the letter with tears running down her cheeks.be close to tears (=almost crying): · Howell was close to tears as he told the court what had happened.· |
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