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单词 intensity
释义

intensity


in·ten·si·ty

I0180000 (ĭn-tĕn′sĭ-tē)n. pl. in·ten·si·ties 1. Exceptionally great concentration, power, or force.2. Physics The amount or degree of strength of electricity, light, heat, or sound per unit area or volume.3. a. The strength of a color, especially the degree to which it lacks its complementary color.b. See saturation.

intensity

(ɪnˈtɛnsɪtɪ) n, pl -ties1. the state or quality of being intense2. extreme force, degree, or amount3. (General Physics) physics a. a measure of field strength or of the energy transmitted by radiation. See radiant intensity, luminous intensityb. (of sound in a specified direction) the average rate of flow of sound energy, usually in watts, for one period through unit area at right angles to the specified direction. Symbol: I 4. (Geological Science) geology Also called: earthquake intensity a measure of the size of an earthquake based on observation of the effects of the shock at the earth's surface. Specified on the Mercalli scale. See Mercalli scale, Richter scale

in•ten•si•ty

(ɪnˈtɛn sɪ ti)

n., pl. -ties. 1. the quality or condition of being intense. 2. great energy, strength, concentration, or vehemence, as of activity. 3. a high or extreme degree, as of cold or heat. 4. the degree or extent to which something is intense. 5. a high degree of emotional excitement; depth of feeling. 6. the strength or sharpness of a color due esp. to its degree of freedom from admixture with its complementary color. 7. Physics. magnitude, as of energy or a force per unit of area, volume, time, etc. [1655–65]

intensity

  • heat - As a preliminary race for a sporting contest, it is so called because of its intensity.
  • crescendo - Often mistakenly used to mean "reaching a pinnacle" when, in fact, it should be used only to describe a gradual increase in intensity or volume.
  • resonate, resound - Resonate means "to expand, to intensity, or amplify the sound of," whereas resound means "to throw back, repeat the sound of."
  • fervency, fervor - The intensity of heat or feeling can be described as fervency, from Latin fervere, "boil"; an instance of this heat or feeling is fervor.

Intensity

 

See Also: SHARPNESS, STARES

  1. Acute as the badness of no woman out in the world thinking about you —Richard Ford
  2. Acute like the flow of hope —Joseph Turnley
  3. As deep into … as a sheep is thick in wool —Anon
  4. Burns like hate —George MacDonald
  5. (Worries and obsessions that) come like hot rivets —Wilfrid Sheed
  6. Deep as first love —Alfred, Lord Tennyson
  7. Deep as earth —Madeleine L’Engle
  8. Deep as hell —Beaumont and Fletcher
  9. Digging in deeper and deeper, like rats in a cheese —Henry Miller
  10. (Lonely and) furious as a hunt —George Garrett
  11. Had a startling intensity of gaze that never wavered from its object, like that of a palmist or a seer —Mary McCarthy
  12. (Curiosity) heating up like an iron —Susan Fromberg Schaeffer
  13. Move through life with the intensity of one for whom each day is the last —Anon
  14. Run deep, like old wounds —William Brammer
  15. Sharp as a pincer —Julia O’Faolain
  16. With the intensity of a cat following a rolling ball of yarn —Ira Berkow on Wade Boggs, Red Sox player’s watching of a pitch, New York Times, October 7, 1986

Intensity

 

back and edge Wholeheartedly, vigorously; entirely, completely. The allusion is to the thin sharpened side of a blade, or “edge,” and the blunt side of the same blade, or “back.” Together the two sides constitute the whole of the blade; thus the figurative extension in meaning to ‘completely,’ ‘wholeheartedly’ ‘with one’s entire self ’

blow up a storm To engage in any activity with such enthusiasm and vigor as to effect a noticeable change in one’s surroundings; also with the implication of being so caught up in the activity as to get carried away one-self. The most plausible explanation says the term comes from jazz trumpeting; another holds it stems from the storm of dust raised from the pit floor by the spectacular beating of wings and flurry of movement in a cockfight. Though blow up a storm appears to be the oldest and still most frequently heard form, up a storm itself is now commonly appended as an adverbial intensifier to many verbs of physical activity—one can work “up a storm,” sing “up a storm,” dance “up a storm,” and so on.

full blast Maximum capacity, strength, volume, or speed; full swing; often in the phrase in or at full blast. In use as early as the 1830s, this phrase apparently originally connoted exaggerated or extreme behavior, appearance, etc., based on the following quotation from Frederick Marryat’s Diary in America II (1839):

“When she came to meeting, with her yellow hat and feathers, wasn’t she in full blast?”

Although the expression’s origin is unknown^ it may be related to the use of blast in relation to machinery: air forced into a furnace by a blower to increase the rate of combustion.

full tilt At maximum speed, force, strength, or capacity; straight at or for, directly. This expression is said to have come from the way knights rode straight for one another at full gallop and with lances tilted when jousting. The phrase, which dates from about 1600, appears in Frederic E. Gretton’s Memory’s Harkback through Haifa-century (1805-58):

The Earl rode full tilt at him as though he would have unhorsed him.

go great guns See PROSPERING.

go to town See PROSPERING.

hammer and tongs Forcefully, violently, strenuously; energetically, vigorously, wholeheartedly. A blacksmith uses tongs to hold the hot iron as he pounds and hammers it into shape. To go at anything hammer and tongs is to exert similar strength and force to accomplish a goal.

head over heels Intensely, completely, totally; rashly, impetuously. This expression, dating from the late 18th century, is a corruption of heels over head, which dates from the 14th century; both relate literally to body movement, as in a somersault. A similar phrase dating from the late 19th century is head over ears, a corruption of over head and ears ‘completely or deeply immersed or involved.’

like a house afire See PACE.

swear like a trooper See PROFANITY.

to beat the band Vigorously, enthusiastically, intently, rapidly. To perform any activity with great force and gusto, so as to drown out or exceed the tempo of the band, as it were. The expression dates from the turn of the century.

tooth and nail Fiercely, vigorously, with all one’s powers and resources. Despite its physical connotations of clawing, biting, and scratching, this phrase is almost always used figuratively. Such usage dates from the 16th century.

with might and main Vigorously, strenuously; using one’s powers and resources to the utmost. The obsolete main is synonymous with might ‘power, strength’ and continues in the language only in this phrase as an intensifier—with might and main being a bit more forceful and somewhat more formal than with all one’s might

Thesaurus
Noun1.intensity - the amount of energy transmitted (as by acoustic or electromagnetic radiation)intensity - the amount of energy transmitted (as by acoustic or electromagnetic radiation); "he adjusted the intensity of the sound"; "they measured the station's signal strength"intensity level, strengthradio brightness - the strength of a radio wave picked up by a radio telescopemagnitude - the property of relative size or extent (whether large or small); "they tried to predict the magnitude of the explosion"; "about the magnitude of a small pea"threshold level - the intensity level that is just barely perceptiblefield intensity, field strength - the vector sum of all the forces exerted by an electrical or magnetic field (on a unit mass or unit charge or unit magnetic pole) at a given point in the fieldcandlepower, light intensity - luminous intensity measured in candelasacoustic power, sound pressure level - the physical intensity of soundhalf-intensity - half the maximum intensity
2.intensity - high level or degree; the property of being intenseintensivenessforcefulness, strength, force - physical energy or intensity; "he hit with all the force he could muster"; "it was destroyed by the strength of the gale"; "a government has not the vitality and forcefulness of a living man"severeness, severity, badness - used of the degree of something undesirable e.g. pain or weathervehemence, emphasis - intensity or forcefulness of expression; "the vehemence of his denial"; "his emphasis on civil rights"top - the greatest possible intensity; "he screamed at the top of his lungs"ferocity, fierceness, furiousness, vehemence, violence, wildness, fury - the property of being wild or turbulent; "the storm's violence"degree, level, grade - a position on a scale of intensity or amount or quality; "a moderate grade of intelligence"; "a high level of care is required"; "it is all a matter of degree"
3.intensity - the magnitude of sound (usually in a specified direction)intensity - the magnitude of sound (usually in a specified direction); "the kids played their music at full volume"loudness, volumesound property - an attribute of soundcrescendo - (music) a gradual increase in loudnessfortissimo, forte - (music) loud
4.intensity - chromatic purity: freedom from dilution with white and hence vivid in huechroma, vividness, saturationchromatic color, chromatic colour, spectral color, spectral colour - a color that has huecolor property - an attribute of color

intensity

noun1. force, power, strength, severity, extremity, fierceness The attack was anticipated, but its intensity came as a shock.2. passion, emotion, fervour, force, power, fire, energy, strength, depth, concentration, excess, severity, vigour, potency, extremity, welly (slang), fanaticism, ardour, vehemence, earnestness, keenness, fierceness, fervency, intenseness His intensity, and the ferocity of his feelings alarmed me.

intensity

nounExceptionally great concentration, power, or force, especially in activity:depth (often used in plural), ferociousness, ferocity, fierceness, fury, pitch, severity, vehemence, vehemency, violence.
Translations
强度

intense

(inˈtens) adjective very great. intense heat; intense hatred. 強烈的 剧烈的inˈtensely adverb very much. I dislike that sort of behaviour intensely. 非常地 非常地inˈtenseness noun 強烈 强烈inˈtensity noun the quality of being intense. the intensity of the heat. 強度 强度inˈtensive (-siv) adjective very great; showing or having great care etc. The police began an intensive search for the murderer; The hospital has just opened a new intensive care unit. 加強的 加强的,集中的,密集的,十分细致的 inˈtensively adverb 加強地 强烈地,集中地 inˈtensiveness noun 加強 加强

intensity


intensity

1. Physicsa. a measure of field strength or of the energy transmitted by radiation b. (of sound in a specified direction) the average rate of flow of sound energy, usually in watts, for one period through unit area at right angles to the specified direction. 2. Geology a measure of the size of an earthquake based on observation of the effects of the shock at the earth's surface. Specified on the Mercalli scale

intensity

1. (radiant intensity) The radiant flux emitted per unit solid angle by a point source in a given direction. It is measured in watts per steradian. 2. Obsolete name for field strength of a magnetic or electric field.

intensity

[in′ten·səd·ē] (physics) The strength or amount of a quantity, as of electric field, current, magnetization, radiation, or radioactivity. The power transmitted by a light or sound wave across a unit area perpendicular to the wave.

intensity


intensity

 [in-ten´sĭ-te] strength, force, or concentration.intensity of nursing care a term in the nursing minimum data set, defined as the total time and staff mix" >staff mix of nursing personnel resources consumed by an individual patient or client during the episode of care under review.

in·ten·si·ty

(in-ten'si-tē), 1. Marked tension; great activity; often used simply to denote a measure of the degree or amount of some quality. 2. The magnitude of acoustic energy, energy flux, field strength, or force. [L. in- tendo, pp. -tensus, to stretch out]

in·ten·si·ty

(in-ten'si-tē) Marked tension; great activity; often used simply to denote a measure of the degree or amount of some quality. [L. in- tendo, pp. -tensus, to stretch out]

in·ten·si·ty

(I) (in-ten'si-tē) 1. Marked tension; great activity; often used simply to denote a measure of the degree or amount of some quality. 2. The magnitude of acoustic energy, energy flux, field strength, or force. [L. in- tendo, pp. -tensus, to stretch out]
See INTST
See INTST

intensity


  • noun

Synonyms for intensity

noun force

Synonyms

  • force
  • power
  • strength
  • severity
  • extremity
  • fierceness

noun passion

Synonyms

  • passion
  • emotion
  • fervour
  • force
  • power
  • fire
  • energy
  • strength
  • depth
  • concentration
  • excess
  • severity
  • vigour
  • potency
  • extremity
  • welly
  • fanaticism
  • ardour
  • vehemence
  • earnestness
  • keenness
  • fierceness
  • fervency
  • intenseness

Synonyms for intensity

noun exceptionally great concentration, power, or force, especially in activity

Synonyms

  • depth
  • ferociousness
  • ferocity
  • fierceness
  • fury
  • pitch
  • severity
  • vehemence
  • vehemency
  • violence

Synonyms for intensity

noun the amount of energy transmitted (as by acoustic or electromagnetic radiation)

Synonyms

  • intensity level
  • strength

Related Words

  • radio brightness
  • magnitude
  • threshold level
  • field intensity
  • field strength
  • candlepower
  • light intensity
  • acoustic power
  • sound pressure level
  • half-intensity

noun high level or degree

Synonyms

  • intensiveness

Related Words

  • forcefulness
  • strength
  • force
  • severeness
  • severity
  • badness
  • vehemence
  • emphasis
  • top
  • ferocity
  • fierceness
  • furiousness
  • violence
  • wildness
  • fury
  • degree
  • level
  • grade

noun the magnitude of sound (usually in a specified direction)

Synonyms

  • loudness
  • volume

Related Words

  • sound property
  • crescendo
  • fortissimo
  • forte

noun chromatic purity: freedom from dilution with white and hence vivid in hue

Synonyms

  • chroma
  • vividness
  • saturation

Related Words

  • chromatic color
  • chromatic colour
  • spectral color
  • spectral colour
  • color property
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更新时间:2024/11/12 1:52:27