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单词 rouse
释义

rouse


rouse

R0323400 (rouz)v. roused, rous·ing, rous·es v.tr.1. To wake (someone) up.2. To cause (someone) to be active, attentive, or excited; stir up. See Synonyms at provoke.3. To give rise to; bring about: an ad that roused my curiosity; a book that roused a furor.v.intr.1. To awaken.2. To become active, attentive, or excited.
[Middle English rousen, to shake the feathers: used of a hawk, perhaps from Old French reuser, ruser, to repel, push back, from Vulgar Latin *recūsāre, from Latin, to refuse; see recuse.]
rous′er n.

rouse

(raʊz) vb1. to bring (oneself or another person) out of sleep, unconsciousness, etc, or (of a person) to come to consciousness in this way2. (tr) to provoke, stir, or excite: to rouse someone's anger. 3. rouse oneself to become active or energetic4. (Hunting) hunting to start or cause to start from cover: to rouse game birds. 5. (Falconry) (intr) falconry (of hawks) to ruffle the feathers and cause them to stand briefly on end (a sign of contentment)6. (foll by: on) Austral to speak scoldingly or rebukingly (to)n (Military) chiefly US another term for reveille[C15 (in sense 5): origin obscure] rousedness n

rouse

(raʊz) n1. an alcoholic drink, esp a full measure2. another word for carousal[C17: probably a variant of carouse (as in the phrase drink a rouse, erroneous for drink carouse); compare Danish drikke en rus to become drunk, German Rausch drunkenness]

rouse

(raʊz)

v. roused, rous•ing,
n. v.t. 1. to bring out of a state of sleep, unconsciousness, inactivity, fancied security, apathy, etc. 2. to stir or incite to strong indignation or anger. 3. to cause (game) to start from a covert or lair. 4. Naut. to pull by main strength; haul. v.i. 5. to come out of a state of sleep, unconsciousness, inactivity, apathy, etc. n. 6. a rousing. 7. a signal for rousing; reveille. [1480–90, in sense “(of a hawk) to shake the feathers”; orig. uncertain] rous′ed•ness, n. rous′er, n. syn: See incite.

rouse


Past participle: roused
Gerund: rousing
Imperative
rouse
rouse
Present
I rouse
you rouse
he/she/it rouses
we rouse
you rouse
they rouse
Preterite
I roused
you roused
he/she/it roused
we roused
you roused
they roused
Present Continuous
I am rousing
you are rousing
he/she/it is rousing
we are rousing
you are rousing
they are rousing
Present Perfect
I have roused
you have roused
he/she/it has roused
we have roused
you have roused
they have roused
Past Continuous
I was rousing
you were rousing
he/she/it was rousing
we were rousing
you were rousing
they were rousing
Past Perfect
I had roused
you had roused
he/she/it had roused
we had roused
you had roused
they had roused
Future
I will rouse
you will rouse
he/she/it will rouse
we will rouse
you will rouse
they will rouse
Future Perfect
I will have roused
you will have roused
he/she/it will have roused
we will have roused
you will have roused
they will have roused
Future Continuous
I will be rousing
you will be rousing
he/she/it will be rousing
we will be rousing
you will be rousing
they will be rousing
Present Perfect Continuous
I have been rousing
you have been rousing
he/she/it has been rousing
we have been rousing
you have been rousing
they have been rousing
Future Perfect Continuous
I will have been rousing
you will have been rousing
he/she/it will have been rousing
we will have been rousing
you will have been rousing
they will have been rousing
Past Perfect Continuous
I had been rousing
you had been rousing
he/she/it had been rousing
we had been rousing
you had been rousing
they had been rousing
Conditional
I would rouse
you would rouse
he/she/it would rouse
we would rouse
you would rouse
they would rouse
Past Conditional
I would have roused
you would have roused
he/she/it would have roused
we would have roused
you would have roused
they would have roused
Thesaurus
Verb1.rouse - become active; "He finally bestirred himself"bestirbe active, move - be in a state of action; "she is always moving"
2.rouse - force or drive out; "The police routed them out of bed at 2 A.M."drive out, rout out, force outmove, displace - cause to move or shift into a new position or place, both in a concrete and in an abstract sense; "Move those boxes into the corner, please"; "I'm moving my money to another bank"; "The director moved more responsibilities onto his new assistant"chase away, dispel, drive away, drive off, drive out, run off, turn back - force to go away; used both with concrete and metaphoric meanings; "Drive away potential burglars"; "drive away bad thoughts"; "dispel doubts"; "The supermarket had to turn back many disappointed customers"hunt - chase away, with as with force; "They hunted the unwanted immigrants out of the neighborhood"smoke out - drive out with smoke; "smoke out the bees"
3.rouse - cause to be agitated, excited, or rousedrouse - cause to be agitated, excited, or roused; "The speaker charged up the crowd with his inflammatory remarks"charge up, commove, agitate, excite, turn on, chargehype up, psych up - get excited or stimulated; "The children were all psyched up after the movie"disturb, trouble, upset - move deeply; "This book upset me"; "A troubling thought"bother - make nervous or agitated; "The mere thought of her bothered him and made his heart beat faster"pother - make upset or troubledelectrify - excite suddenly and intensely; "The news electrified us"
4.rouse - cause to become awake or consciousrouse - cause to become awake or conscious; "He was roused by the drunken men in the street"; "Please wake me at 6 AM."awaken, wake up, waken, wake, arousereawaken - awaken once againbring to, bring back, bring round, bring around - return to consciousness; "These pictures bring back sad memories"call - rouse somebody from sleep with a call; "I was called at 5 A.M. this morning"alter, change, modify - cause to change; make different; cause a transformation; "The advent of the automobile may have altered the growth pattern of the city"; "The discussion has changed my thinking about the issue"

rouse

verb1. wake up, call, wake, get up, awaken, knock up (informal) She roused him at 8.30.2. excite, move, arouse, stir, disturb, provoke, anger, startle, animate, prod, exhilarate, get going, agitate, inflame, incite, whip up, galvanize, bestir He did more to rouse the crowd than anybody else.3. stimulate, provoke, arouse, incite, instigate It roused a feeling of rebellion in him.

rouse

verb1. To cease sleeping:arouse, awake, awaken, stir, wake, waken.2. To induce or elicit (a reaction or emotion):arouse, awake, awaken, kindle, raise, stir (up), waken.
Translations
唤醒激起

rouse

(rauz) verb1. to awaken. I'll rouse you at 6 o'clock. 喚醒 唤醒2. to stir or excite. Her interest was roused by what he said. 激起 激起ˈrousing adjective stirring; exciting. a rousing speech. 令人振奮的 令人振奋的

rouse


rouse (one) from (something)

To bring one back to consciousness or alertness out of some state of unconsciousness. Doctors' efforts to rouse the man from his coma have been unsuccessful. I find I have to set multiple alarms to rouse me from sleep in the morning. The teacher's words roused me from the daydream.See also: rouse

rouse (one) out of (something)

To bring one back to consciousness or alertness out of some state of unconsciousness. Doctors' efforts to rouse the man out of his coma have been unsuccessful. I find I have to set multiple alarms to rouse me out of sleep in the morning. The teacher's words roused me out of the daydream.See also: of, out, rouse

rouse (one) to (something)

To incite, instigate, or urge on one to undertake some action. The violent death of the activist roused the nation to stand up against the injustices of the government. The rebel leader's impassioned speech roused the fighters to action.See also: rouse

rouse someone from something

to awaken someone from something; to cause someone to come out of something. I roused Tom from his nap and sent him on his way. We could not rouse her from her deep sleep.See also: rouse

rouse someone out of something

to awaken someone out of a state, such as sleep. It was almost impossible to rouse George out of his sleep. They could not rouse us out of our drowsy state.See also: of, out, rouse

rouse someone to something

to stir someone to something. I will rouse the workers to action. They will work or have to find other jobs. The speech by the president roused the citizens to action.See also: rouse

ROUSE


AcronymDefinition
ROUSEResponding Optimally with Unknown Sources of Evidence

rouse


  • verb

Synonyms for rouse

verb wake up

Synonyms

  • wake up
  • call
  • wake
  • get up
  • awaken
  • knock up

verb excite

Synonyms

  • excite
  • move
  • arouse
  • stir
  • disturb
  • provoke
  • anger
  • startle
  • animate
  • prod
  • exhilarate
  • get going
  • agitate
  • inflame
  • incite
  • whip up
  • galvanize
  • bestir

verb stimulate

Synonyms

  • stimulate
  • provoke
  • arouse
  • incite
  • instigate

Synonyms for rouse

verb to cease sleeping

Synonyms

  • arouse
  • awake
  • awaken
  • stir
  • wake
  • waken

verb to induce or elicit (a reaction or emotion)

Synonyms

  • arouse
  • awake
  • awaken
  • kindle
  • raise
  • stir
  • waken

Synonyms for rouse

verb become active

Synonyms

  • bestir

Related Words

  • be active
  • move

verb force or drive out

Synonyms

  • drive out
  • rout out
  • force out

Related Words

  • move
  • displace
  • chase away
  • dispel
  • drive away
  • drive off
  • drive out
  • run off
  • turn back
  • hunt
  • smoke out

verb cause to be agitated, excited, or roused

Synonyms

  • charge up
  • commove
  • agitate
  • excite
  • turn on
  • charge

Related Words

  • hype up
  • psych up
  • disturb
  • trouble
  • upset
  • bother
  • pother
  • electrify

verb cause to become awake or conscious

Synonyms

  • awaken
  • wake up
  • waken
  • wake
  • arouse

Related Words

  • reawaken
  • bring to
  • bring back
  • bring round
  • bring around
  • call
  • alter
  • change
  • modify
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更新时间:2025/1/31 9:07:05