单词 | adore | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
释义 | adorea‧dore /əˈdɔː $ əˈdɔːr/ ●○○ verb [transitive] Word Origin WORD ORIGINadore Verb TableOrigin: 1300-1400 French adorer, from Latin adorare, from ad- ‘to’ + orare ‘to speak, pray’VERB TABLE adore
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER DICTIONARIES Thesaurus
THESAURUS► love Collocations to like someone very much and care a lot about them – used especially about people in your family or someone who you are sexually attracted to: · I love my wife and children very much.· Have you ever said ‘I love you’ and not really meant it? ► adore to love and admire someone very much: · When she was a child she adored her father. ► be in love (with somebody) to feel that you love someone and want to have a romantic relationship with them: · We were both young and very much in love.· Karen was in love with a man who was much older than her. ► be infatuated with somebody to love someone a lot and keep thinking about them, in a way that seems silly because you do not know them very well: · He became infatuated with a woman he met at a conference. ► have a crush on somebody to love and be sexually attracted to someone you are not having a relationship with, usually someone older: · Jane had a crush on the German teacher. ► be crazy about somebody informal to love someone very much – used for emphasis: · She’s crazy about you. ► be devoted to somebody to love someone very much and give them a lot of attention: · He was devoted to his wife and his children. ► dote on somebody written to love someone very much, especially a much younger family member, and behave very kindly to them: · He dotes on his grandchildren. to like something very much► love/adore to like something very much. Adore is stronger than love but is less common: · I love the smell of coffee.· The children absolutely adore her books. ► be crazy about something (also be mad about something British English informal) to be extremely interested in an activity and spend a lot of time doing it or watching it: · Jonah’s crazy about basketball.· She’s always been mad about horses. ► have a passion for something to like an activity very much, because it gives you a lot of pleasure or excitement: · From a very early age he had a passion for fast cars.· To be a great performer, you have to work very hard and have a passion for the music you play. ► be addicted to something to like doing something so much that you spend all your free time doing it: · My son’s addicted to computer games – he hardly ever comes out of his room.· I started watching the show out of curiosity, but now I’m addicted! Longman Language Activatorto like something very much► love/adore especially spoken to like something very much. Adore is stronger but less common than love: · We had a great time at Disneyland. The kids loved it.· I adore chocolate -- I could live on it.love/adore doing something: · The older men loved hearing about Russ's success on the football field.· Jessie adored being the centre of attention. ► be crazy about also be mad about something British informal to be extremely interested in an activity and spend a lot of time doing it or watching it: · Jonah's crazy about basketball.· She's always been mad about horses. ► be attached to to like something very much, especially something that you own or use, so that you would be upset if you lost it: · Mom gets very attached to her pets.· Casey had become quite attached to the comforts of his London home. ► have a passion for to like an activity very much, because it gives you a lot of pleasure or excitement: · From a very early age he had a passion for fast cars.· To be a great performer, you have to work very hard and have a passion for the music you play. ► be addicted to to enjoy doing something so much that you do it, watch it etc as often as you can and feel that you cannot stop doing it: · My son's addicted to computer games - he hardly ever comes out of his room.be addicted: · I started watching the show out of curiosity, but now I'm addicted! to like someone a lot and care about them► love to love someone in your family, so that you care a lot about what happens to them, and you want them to be happy: · I really believed that my parents didn't love me.· He loved his stepdaughter as if she were his own child. ► close if people are close , they enjoy being together and they know and understand each other's feelings and thoughts: · My sister and I used to argue a lot, but now we're very close.· We have always been a close family.close to: · I'm still very close to my parents. ► be fond of to like someone very much, especially after spending a long time with them and getting to know them: · I'm very fond of my sister's children.· All teachers have children that they are particularly fond of.· We were all very fond of Mr Edwards. ► care to feel love and concern for someone: · She thinks we're interfering but we're only doing it because we care.· Buy her some flowers to show her you really care.care about: · I'm very lucky to have a husband, family and friends who care about me.· Of course I care about Kirsty - that's why I want to help her. ► adore to love someone very much and feel proud of them: · Branwell Bronte adored his sister Anne.· She adores her grandchildren and is always buying them presents. ► worship to love and admire someone very much: · He worshipped his elder brother.worship the ground somebody walks on (=love someone very much, even if they behave badly): · In Susie's eyes he can do no wrong - she worships the ground he walks on. ► be devoted to to love someone very much and be very loyal to them or spend all your time with them: · He is a good man, devoted to his wife and children. ► dote on to love someone, especially someone younger than you, very much and show this by your actions: · He'd do anything for his children - he really dotes on them.· She obviously dotes on her grandson.· You should visit your aunt more often, you know how she dotes on you all. ► think the world of to love and respect someone so much that they are very important in your life: · We all thought the world of Isaac and were devastated when he died.· He thinks the world of his uncle. COLLOCATIONS FROM THE CORPUSNOUN► man 1to love someone very much and feel very proud of them: Betty adores her grandchildren.► see thesaurus at love2informal to like something very much: I simply adore chocolate.► see thesaurus at likeGRAMMAR: Using the progressiveAdore is not used in the progressive. You say: · He adores his students.· I adore your cake. ✗Don’t say: he is adoring | I am adoringGrammar guide ‒ VERBS· Whatever her shape, the men adored her.· In describing the life of a man so widely adored and reviled, a little moderation is just what's needed. ► woman· Another woman might adore helpless, cuddly babies but find the activity and demands of toddlers nerve-wracking.· I told myself that some one like Gharr imagine that all women adored him.· Unfortunately, she was also one of those women born to be adored by men. |
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