释义 |
relieve
re·lieve R0140400 (rĭ-lēv′)tr.v. re·lieved, re·liev·ing, re·lieves 1. a. To cause a lessening or alleviation of: relieved all his symptoms; relieved the tension.b. To make less tedious, monotonous, or unpleasant: Only one small candle relieved the gloom.2. To free from pain, anxiety, or distress: I was relieved by the news that they had arrived home safely.3. a. To furnish assistance or aid to: relieve the flooded region.b. To rescue from siege.4. a. To release (a person) from an obligation, restriction, or burden.b. To free from a specified duty by providing or acting as a substitute.c. Baseball To enter the game as a relief pitcher after (another pitcher).5. Informal To rob or deprive: Pickpockets relieved him of his money.6. Archaic To make prominent or effective by contrast; set off.Idiom: relieve (oneself) To urinate or defecate. [Middle English releven, from Old French relever, from Latin relevāre : re-, re- + levāre, to raise; see legwh- in Indo-European roots.] re·liev′a·ble adj.Synonyms: relieve, allay, alleviate, assuage, lighten2, mitigate, palliate These verbs mean to make something less severe or more bearable. To relieve is to make more endurable something causing discomfort or distress: "that misery which he strives in vain to relieve" (Henry David Thoreau). Allay suggests at least temporary relief from what is burdensome or painful: "This music crept by me upon the waters, / Allaying both their fury and my passion / With its sweet air" (Shakespeare). Alleviate connotes temporary lessening of distress without removal of its cause: "No arguments shall be wanting on my part that can alleviate so severe a misfortune" (Jane Austen). To assuage is to soothe or make milder: assuaged his guilt by confessing to the crime. Lighten signifies to make less heavy or oppressive: legislation that would lighten the taxpayer's burden. Mitigate and palliate connote moderating the force or intensity of something that causes suffering: "I ... prayed to the Lord to mitigate a calamity" (John Galt)."Organizations for writers palliate the writer's loneliness but I doubt if they improve his writing" (Ernest Hemingway).relieve (rɪˈliːv) vb (tr) 1. to bring alleviation of (pain, distress, etc) to (someone)2. to bring aid or assistance to (someone in need, a disaster area, etc)3. to take over the duties or watch of (someone)4. (Military) to bring aid or a relieving force to (a besieged town, city, etc)5. to free (someone) from an obligation6. to make (something) less unpleasant, arduous, or monotonous7. to bring into relief or prominence, as by contrast8. (foll by of) informal to take from: the thief relieved him of his watch. 9. relieve oneself to urinate or defecate[C14: from Old French relever, from Latin relevāre to lift up, relieve, from re- + levāre to lighten] reˈlievable adjre•lieve (rɪˈliv) v. -lieved, -liev•ing. v.t. 1. to ease or alleviate (pain, distress, anxiety, need, etc.); mitigate; allay. 2. to free from anxiety, fear, pain, etc. 3. to free from need or poverty. 4. to bring effective aid to (a besieged town, military position, etc.). 5. to ease (a person) of a burden, wrong, or oppression. 6. to reduce (a pressure, load, weight, etc., on a device or object under stress). 7. to make less tedious, unpleasant, or monotonous: Curtains relieved the drabness of the room. 8. to bring into relief or prominence; heighten the effect of. 9. to release (a person on duty) by coming as or providing a substitute or replacement. 10. to replace (a baseball pitcher). 11. to release from an obligation or position: to be relieved of one's post. 12. Informal. to take something from; rob (usu. fol. by of): The thief relieved me of my wallet. v.i. 13. to act as a relief pitcher. Idioms: relieve oneself, to urinate or defecate. [1300–50; Middle English releven < Middle French relever to raise < Latin relevāre to reduce the load of, lighten =re- re- + levāre to raise, derivative of levis light in weight] re•liev′a•ble, adj. re•liev′ed•ly, adv. re•liev′er, n. relieve - Metaphorically, to "alleviate, lighten," from Latin relevare, "raise again."See also related terms for metaphor.relieve relief">relief1. 'relieve'Relieve /rɪ'liːv/ is a verb. If something relieves an unpleasant feeling, it makes it less unpleasant. Anxiety may be relieved by talking to a friend.The passengers in the plane swallow to relieve the pressure on their eardrums.If someone or something relieves you of an unpleasant feeling or difficulty, you no longer have it. The news relieved him of some of his embarrassment.Relieve is often used in the passive structure be relieved. If you are relieved, you feel happy because something unpleasant has stopped or has not happened. I was relieved when Hannah finally arrived.Be relieved is often followed by a to-infinitive. He was relieved to find he'd suffered no more than a few scratches.2. 'relief'Relief /rɪ'liːf/ is a noun. If you feel relief, you feel glad because something unpleasant has stopped or has not happened. I breathed a sigh of relief.To my relief, he found the suggestion acceptable.Relief is also money, food, or clothing that is provided for people who are very poor or hungry. We are providing relief to vulnerable refugees, especially those who are sick.relieve Past participle: relieved Gerund: relieving
Present |
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I relieve | you relieve | he/she/it relieves | we relieve | you relieve | they relieve |
Preterite |
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I relieved | you relieved | he/she/it relieved | we relieved | you relieved | they relieved |
Present Continuous |
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I am relieving | you are relieving | he/she/it is relieving | we are relieving | you are relieving | they are relieving |
Present Perfect |
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I have relieved | you have relieved | he/she/it has relieved | we have relieved | you have relieved | they have relieved |
Past Continuous |
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I was relieving | you were relieving | he/she/it was relieving | we were relieving | you were relieving | they were relieving |
Past Perfect |
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I had relieved | you had relieved | he/she/it had relieved | we had relieved | you had relieved | they had relieved |
Future |
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I will relieve | you will relieve | he/she/it will relieve | we will relieve | you will relieve | they will relieve |
Future Perfect |
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I will have relieved | you will have relieved | he/she/it will have relieved | we will have relieved | you will have relieved | they will have relieved |
Future Continuous |
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I will be relieving | you will be relieving | he/she/it will be relieving | we will be relieving | you will be relieving | they will be relieving |
Present Perfect Continuous |
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I have been relieving | you have been relieving | he/she/it has been relieving | we have been relieving | you have been relieving | they have been relieving |
Future Perfect Continuous |
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I will have been relieving | you will have been relieving | he/she/it will have been relieving | we will have been relieving | you will have been relieving | they will have been relieving |
Past Perfect Continuous |
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I had been relieving | you had been relieving | he/she/it had been relieving | we had been relieving | you had been relieving | they had been relieving |
Conditional |
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I would relieve | you would relieve | he/she/it would relieve | we would relieve | you would relieve | they would relieve |
Past Conditional |
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I would have relieved | you would have relieved | he/she/it would have relieved | we would have relieved | you would have relieved | they would have relieved | ThesaurusVerb | 1. | relieve - provide physical relief, as from pain; "This pill will relieve your headaches"alleviate, palliate, assuagesoothe - cause to feel better; "the medicine soothes the pain of the inflammation"comfort, ease - lessen pain or discomfort; alleviate; "ease the pain in your legs"ameliorate, improve, meliorate, amend, better - to make better; "The editor improved the manuscript with his changes" | | 2. | relieve - free someone temporarily from his or her obligationstake overspell - relieve (someone) from work by taking a turn; "She spelled her husband at the wheel"discharge, free - free from obligations or duties | | 3. | relieve - grant relief or an exemption from a rule or requirement to; "She exempted me from the exam"exempt, freederestrict - make free from restrictionsderegulate - lift the regulations ondispense - grant a dispensation; grant an exemption; "I was dispensed from this terrible task"forgive - absolve from payment; "I forgive you your debt"spare - save or relieve from an experience or action; "I'll spare you from having to apologize formally" | | 4. | relieve - lessen the intensity of or calm; "The news eased my conscience"; "still the fears"allay, still, easecomfort, console, solace, soothe - give moral or emotional strength toabreact - discharge bad feelings or tension through verbalization | | 5. | relieve - save from ruin, destruction, or harmsalvage, salve, saverescue, deliver - free from harm or evil | | 6. | relieve - relieve oneself of troubling informationunbosomconfide - reveal in private; tell confidentially | | 7. | relieve - provide relief for; "remedy his illness"remedypractice of medicine, medicine - the learned profession that is mastered by graduate training in a medical school and that is devoted to preventing or alleviating or curing diseases and injuries; "he studied medicine at Harvard"care for, treat - provide treatment for; "The doctor treated my broken leg"; "The nurses cared for the bomb victims"; "The patient must be treated right away or she will die"; "Treat the infection with antibiotics" | | 8. | relieve - free from a burden, evil, or distressdisembarrass, rid, free - relieve from; "Rid the house of pests" | | 9. | relieve - take by stealing; "The thief relieved me of $100"take - take by force; "Hitler took the Baltic Republics"; "The army took the fort on the hill" | | 10. | relieve - grant exemption or release to; "Please excuse me from this class"let off, excuse, exemptfrank - exempt by means of an official pass or letter, as from customs or other checksabsolve, justify, free - let off the hook; "I absolve you from this responsibility" | | 11. | relieve - alleviate or remove (pressure or stress) or make less oppressive; "relieve the pressure and the stress"; "lighten the burden of caring for her elderly parents"lightenmitigate - make less severe or harsh; "mitigating circumstances" |
relieveverb1. ease, soothe, alleviate, allay, relax, comfort, calm, cure, dull, diminish, soften, console, appease, solace, mitigate, abate, assuage, mollify, salve, palliate Drugs can relieve much of the pain. ease intensify, worsen, heighten, exacerbate, aggravate2. interrupt, reduce, break up, alleviate, dispel, brighten, punctuate, lighten, counteract, mitigate, let up on (informal), make bearable Television did help to relieve the boredom and isolation.3. free, release, deliver, discharge, exempt, unburden, disembarrass, disencumber He felt relieved of a burden.4. take over from, substitute for, stand in for, take the place of, give (someone) a break or rest At seven o'clock the night nurse came in to relieve her.5. help, support, aid, sustain, assist, succour, bring aid to a programme to relieve poor countriesrelieve yourself pee, wee (informal), piss (taboo slang) (slang), urinate, tinkle (Brit. informal), piddle (informal), spend a penny (Brit. informal), make water, pass water, wee-wee (informal), take a leak (slang), micturate, take a whizz (slang, chiefly U.S.) She has to relieve herself every ten minutes.relieveverb1. To make less severe or more bearable:allay, alleviate, assuage, comfort, ease, lessen, lighten, mitigate, palliate.2. To free from or cast out something objectionable or undesirable:clear, disburden, disembarrass, disencumber, release, rid, shake off, throw off, unburden.Slang: shake.3. To give support or assistance:abet, aid, assist, boost, help (out), succor.Idioms: give a hand, give a leg up.4. To free from an obligation or duty:absolve, discharge, dispense, excuse, exempt, let off, spare.5. To free from a specific duty by acting as a substitute:spell, take over.Translationsrelief (rəˈliːf) noun1. a lessening or stopping of pain, worry, boredom etc. When one has a headache, an aspirin brings relief; He gave a sigh of relief; It was a great relief to find nothing had been stolen. (痛苦、擔憂、無聊感)減輕、消除 (痛苦的)减轻 2. help (eg food) given to people in need of it. famine relief; (also adjective) A relief fund has been set up to send supplies to the refugees. 救濟 救济3. a person who takes over some job or task from another person, usually after a given period of time. The bus-driver was waiting for his relief; (also adjective) a relief driver. 換班的人,換班的 换班(的人) 4. the act of freeing a town etc from siege. the relief of Mafeking. 解救 援救5. a way of carving etc in which the design is raised above the level of its background. a carving in relief. 浮雕 浮雕reˈlieve (-v) verb1. to lessen or stop (pain, worry etc). The doctor gave him some drugs to relieve the pain; to relieve the hardship of the refugees. 減輕,消除(痛苦、擔憂) 减轻(痛苦) 2. to take over a job or task from. You guard the door first, and I'll relieve you in two hours. 換班 换岗3. to dismiss (a person) from his job or position. He was relieved of his post/duties. 免職 解除4. to take (something heavy, difficult etc) from someone. May I relieve you of that heavy case?; The new gardener relieved the old man of the burden of cutting the grass. 幫人提(重物),替人減輕(負擔) 替...人拿...5. to come to the help of (a town etc which is under siege or attack). 幫(圍城)脫困或解圍 救援reˈlieved adjective no longer anxious or worried. I was relieved to hear you had arrived safely. 鬆了一口氣 轻松(的)
relieve
relieve (oneself)euphemism To urinate or (less commonly) defecate. Tom decided to get rid of the dog after it relieved itself on his $500 rug. We'll be pulling into a rest stop soon, if anyone needs to relieve themselves.See also: relieverelieve (someone or oneself) of (something)1. To remove or lessen a burden on someone or oneself. Simply talking to someone can go a long way toward relieving yourself of stress or anxiety.2. To remove someone or oneself from a job or set of responsibilities. The chief of police has been relieved of duty in the wake of the investigation into departmental corruption. I decided to relieve myself of the position to avoid any potential conflicts of interest.3. To rob someone of something. There are plenty of thieves willing to relieve you of your belongings if you aren't paying attention.See also: of, relieverelieve (one's) feelingsTo do or say something as a means of venting or coping with one's feelings, especially anger or frustration. You may feel compelled to relieve your feelings of frustration by spanking your toddler, but it won't make you feel better, and it will teach them that violence is an acceptable solution to problems. Whenever anxiety takes hold of me, I go out for a walk along the canal to relieve my feelings.See also: feeling, relieverelieve one of one's dutiesEuph. to fire someone; to dismiss someone from employment. I am afraid I must relieve you of your duties. After the scandal, she was relieved of her duties at the embassy.See also: duty, of, one, relieverelieve oneselfEuph. to urinate or defecate. He stopped by the side of the road to relieve himself. She needed badly to relieve herself, but there was no bathroom in sight.See also: relieverelieve someone of something 1. Lit. to unburden someone of something. Here, let me relieve you of that heavy box. At last, he could relieve himself of the problem. 2. . Fig. to lessen someone's responsibilities. I will relieve you of some of the responsibility you have carried for so long. Let me relieve you of that job. You have enough to do.See also: of, relieverelieve oneselfUrinate or defecate, as in The puppy relieved itself in the middle of the floor. The use of relieve for these bodily functions dates from the mid-1800s. See also: relieverelieve someone of1. Take something away from someone, rob someone of something, as in The pickpocket relieved Dean of his wallet. 2. Take away a burden or responsibility, as in The doorman relieved her of her packages, or He was relieved of all his duties. [Early 1800s] See also: of, relieve, someonerelieve your feelings use strong language or vigorous behaviour when annoyed.See also: feeling, relieverelieve ofv.1. To take or lift a burden from someone: The bellhop relieved us of our heavy luggage. Their rudeness relieved me of the burden of having to invite them.2. To dismiss someone from a job, office, or position: After the scandal, the army relieved him of his post.3. To rob or deprive someone of something: Pickpockets relieved the tourist of her money.See also: of, relieve relieve (oneself) To urinate or defecate.Relieve
RelieveTo assist any overloaded member by any construction device, such as a discharging arch placed above an opening.relieveTo lighten a color in order to reduce its intensity.relieve
re·lieve (rē-lēv'), To free wholly or partly from pain or discomfort, either physical or mental. [through O. Fr. fr. L. re-levo, to lift up, lighten] relieve (rĭ-lēv′)v.1. To lessen or alleviate something, such as pain or a symptom.2. To free from pain, anxiety, or distress. re·liev′a·ble adj.re·liev′er n.re·lieve (rĕ-lēv') To free wholly or partly from pain or discomfort, either physical or mental. [through O. Fr. fr. L. re-levo, to lift up, lighten]re·lieve (rĕ-lēv') To free wholly or partly from pain or discomfort, either physical or mental. [through O. Fr. fr. L. re-levo, to lift up, lighten]Patient discussion about relieveQ. how can you naturally relieve a minor asthma attack in a baby don't have albutoral on our trip what can we doA. P.S---there are NO natural meds for and asthma attack after it has started,one of the things that i find is that natural meds work to pre-vent disease,IF you take it right,for long period of time.--the active ingredients in natural meds are in very small amounts,therefore you have to take alot of fruit,veg,ect---coffee can stop an asthma attack--but you cant drink coffee in that large amount,and then you will be hyperactive--and your heart rate will go up--headach can acure.mrfoot56 Q. What is a natural way to relieve my stress and depression without drugs? I am diagnosed with depression and taking Anti depressant drugs. What is a natural way to relieve my stress and depression without drugs? It makes me sick to my stomach.A. Any kind of physical activity will help with stress and depression. It doesn't matter what kind of exercise or physical activity it is either. Try to find the one you enjoy doing and stick with it. Another good way is YOGA. It is more effective for people with depression. Q. Does anyone know how to relieve chronic back pain due to inflammation and arthritis? I have tried OTC arthritis pain meds they don't offer much relief for me. I have had surgery for herniated disc. My doctor says that there is a lot of inflammation and arthritis in my back. You can't get Vioxx anymore. Is there an alternative?A. there also is a drug called diclofenac(cataflam) ask your DR. More discussions about relieveLegalSeereliefFinancialSeeReliefSee RLV
RELIEVE
Acronym | Definition |
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RELIEVE➣Revista Electrónica de Investigación y Evaluación Educativa (Spanish) |
relieve
Synonyms for relieveverb easeSynonyms- ease
- soothe
- alleviate
- allay
- relax
- comfort
- calm
- cure
- dull
- diminish
- soften
- console
- appease
- solace
- mitigate
- abate
- assuage
- mollify
- salve
- palliate
Antonyms- intensify
- worsen
- heighten
- exacerbate
- aggravate
verb interruptSynonyms- interrupt
- reduce
- break up
- alleviate
- dispel
- brighten
- punctuate
- lighten
- counteract
- mitigate
- let up on
- make bearable
verb freeSynonyms- free
- release
- deliver
- discharge
- exempt
- unburden
- disembarrass
- disencumber
verb take over fromSynonyms- take over from
- substitute for
- stand in for
- take the place of
- give (someone) a break or rest
verb helpSynonyms- help
- support
- aid
- sustain
- assist
- succour
- bring aid to
phrase relieve yourselfSynonyms- pee
- wee
- piss
- urinate
- tinkle
- piddle
- spend a penny
- make water
- pass water
- wee-wee
- take a leak
- micturate
- take a whizz
Synonyms for relieveverb to make less severe or more bearableSynonyms- allay
- alleviate
- assuage
- comfort
- ease
- lessen
- lighten
- mitigate
- palliate
verb to free from or cast out something objectionable or undesirableSynonyms- clear
- disburden
- disembarrass
- disencumber
- release
- rid
- shake off
- throw off
- unburden
- shake
verb to give support or assistanceSynonyms- abet
- aid
- assist
- boost
- help
- succor
verb to free from an obligation or dutySynonyms- absolve
- discharge
- dispense
- excuse
- exempt
- let off
- spare
verb to free from a specific duty by acting as a substituteSynonymsSynonyms for relieveverb provide physical relief, as from painSynonymsRelated Words- soothe
- comfort
- ease
- ameliorate
- improve
- meliorate
- amend
- better
verb free someone temporarily from his or her obligationsSynonymsRelated Wordsverb grant relief or an exemption from a rule or requirement toSynonymsRelated Words- derestrict
- deregulate
- dispense
- forgive
- spare
verb lessen the intensity of or calmSynonymsRelated Words- comfort
- console
- solace
- soothe
- abreact
verb save from ruin, destruction, or harmSynonymsRelated Wordsverb relieve oneself of troubling informationSynonymsRelated Wordsverb provide relief forSynonymsRelated Words- practice of medicine
- medicine
- care for
- treat
verb free from a burden, evil, or distressRelated Wordsverb take by stealingRelated Wordsverb grant exemption or release toSynonymsRelated Wordsverb alleviate or remove (pressure or stress) or make less oppressiveSynonymsRelated Words |