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单词 attitude
释义

attitude


attitude

position; disposition; feeling regarding a person or thing: a negative attitude; posture that is expressive of an emotion: an attitude of indifference
Not to be confused with:altitude – elevation; extent or distance upward; height: The altitude of the Washington Monument is 555 feet.

at·ti·tude

A0510700 (ăt′ĭ-to͞od′, -tyo͞od′)n.1. a. A manner of thinking, feeling, or behaving that reflects a state of mind or disposition: has a positive attitude about work; kept a dignified attitude throughout the crisis.b. Arrogant or aggressive disposition or behavior: One customer with a lot of attitude really tried my patience.2. a. A position of the body or manner of carrying oneself: stood in a graceful attitude. See Synonyms at posture.b. A position similar to an arabesque in which a ballet dancer stands on one leg with the other raised either in front or in back and bent at the knee.3. a. The orientation of an aircraft's axes relative to a reference line or plane, such as the horizon.b. The orientation of a spacecraft relative to its direction of motion.
[French, from Italian attitudine, from Late Latin aptitūdō, aptitūdin-, faculty; see aptitude.]
at′ti·tu′di·nal (-to͞od′n-əl, -tyo͞od′-) adj.at′ti·tu′di·nal·ly adv.

attitude

(ˈætɪˌtjuːd) n1. the way a person views something or tends to behave towards it, often in an evaluative way2. a theatrical pose created for effect (esp in the phrase strike an attitude)3. a position of the body indicating mood or emotion4. informal a hostile manner: don't give me attitude, my girl. 5. (Aeronautics) the orientation of an aircraft's axes in relation to some plane, esp the horizontal. See also axis116. (Astronautics) the orientation of a spacecraft in relation to its direction of motion7. (Ballet) ballet a classical position in which the body is upright and one leg raised and bent behind[C17: from French, from Italian attitudine disposition, from Late Latin aptitūdō fitness, from Latin aptus apt] ˌattiˈtudinal adj

at•ti•tude

(ˈæt ɪˌtud, -ˌtyud)

n. 1. manner, disposition, feeling, position: a cheerful attitude. 2. position or posture of the body appropriate to or expressive of an action, emotion, etc.: a threatening attitude. 3. the inclination of the three principal axes of an aircraft relative to the wind, to the ground, etc. 4. Slang. a testy, uncooperative disposition. [1660–70; < French < Italian attitudine < Late Latin aptitūdō aptitude] at`ti•tu′di•nal, adj. syn: See position.

attitude

The position of a body as determined by the inclination of the axes to some frame of reference. If not otherwise specified, this frame of reference is fixed to the Earth.

attitude

A pose on one leg with corresponding arm open to side or back, other leg extended to back at 90° with knee bent, corresponding arm raised above head. The raised leg has heel touching supporting leg and the same arm as the supporting leg raised above head.
Thesaurus
Noun1.attitude - a complex mental state involving beliefs and feelings and values and dispositions to act in certain waysattitude - a complex mental state involving beliefs and feelings and values and dispositions to act in certain ways; "he had the attitude that work was fun"mental attitudecognition, knowledge, noesis - the psychological result of perception and learning and reasoningacceptance, credence - the mental attitude that something is believable and should be accepted as true; "he gave credence to the gossip"; "acceptance of Newtonian mechanics was unquestioned for 200 years"culture - the attitudes and behavior that are characteristic of a particular social group or organization; "the developing drug culture"; "the reason that the agency is doomed to inaction has something to do with the FBI culture"defensive, defensive attitude - an attitude of defensiveness (especially in the phrase `on the defensive')hardball - a no-nonsense attitude in business or politics; "they play hardball in the Senate"high horse - an attitude of arrogant superiority; "get off your high horse and admit you are wrong"southernism - an attitude characteristic of Southerners (especially in the US)mentality, mindset, mind-set, outlook - a habitual or characteristic mental attitude that determines how you will interpret and respond to situationspaternalism - the attitude (of a person or a government) that subordinates should be controlled in a fatherly way for their own goodstance, posture, position - a rationalized mental attitudeinclination, tendency, disposition - an attitude of mind especially one that favors one alternative over others; "he had an inclination to give up too easily"; "a tendency to be too strict"tolerance - willingness to recognize and respect the beliefs or practices of othersintolerance - unwillingness to recognize and respect differences in opinions or beliefsesteem, respect, regard - an attitude of admiration or esteem; "she lost all respect for him"disrespect - a disrespectful mental attitudereverence - a reverent mental attitudeirreverence - an irreverent mental attitudeorientation - an integrated set of attitudes and beliefs
2.attitude - the arrangement of the body and its limbsattitude - the arrangement of the body and its limbs; "he assumed an attitude of surrender"posture, positionorder arms - a position in the manual of arms; the rifle is held vertically on the right side with the butt on the ground; often used as a commandbodily property - an attribute of the bodyballet position - classical position of the body and especially the feet in balletdecubitus - a reclining position (as in a bed)eversion - the position of being turned outward; "the eversion of the foot"lithotomy position - a position lying on your back with knees bent and thighs apart; assumed for vaginal or rectal examinationlotus position - a sitting position with the legs crossed; used in yogamissionary position - a position for sexual intercourse; a man and woman lie facing each other with the man on top; so-called because missionaries thought it the proper position for primitive peoplespose - a posture assumed by models for photographic or artistic purposespresentation - (obstetrics) position of the fetus in the uterus relative to the birth canal; "Cesarean sections are sometimes the result of abnormal presentations"ectopia - abnormal position of a part or organ (especially at the time of birth)asana - (Hinduism) a posture or manner of sitting (as in the practice of yoga)guard - a posture of defence in boxing or fencing; "keep your guard up"sprawling, sprawl - an ungainly posture with arms and legs spread aboutstance - standing posturetuck - (sports) a bodily position adopted in some sports (such as diving or skiing) in which the knees are bent and the thighs are drawn close to the chest
3.attitude - a theatrical pose created for effectattitude - a theatrical pose created for effect; "the actor struck just the right attitude"affectation, affectedness, mannerism, pose - a deliberate pretense or exaggerated display
4.attitude - position of aircraft or spacecraft relative to a frame of reference (the horizon or direction of motion)orientation - position or alignment relative to points of the compass or other specific directionstrim - attitude of an aircraft in flight when allowed to take its own orientation

attitude

noun1. opinion, thinking, feeling, thought, view, position, approach, belief, mood, perspective, point of view, stance, outlook, viewpoint, slant, frame of mind the general change in attitude towards them2. manner, air, condition, bearing, aspect, carriage, disposition, demeanour, mien (literary) He has a gentle attitude.3. position, bearing, pose, stance, carriage, posture scenes of the king in various attitudes of worshipping

attitude

noun1. The way in which one is placed or arranged:pose, position, posture.2. The way in which a person holds or carries his or her body:carriage, pose, posture, stance.3. A frame of mind affecting one's thoughts or behavior:outlook, position, posture, stance.4. A general cast of mind with regard to something:feeling, sentiment.
Translations
态度姿势

attitude

(ˈӕtitjuːd) noun1. a way of thinking or acting etc. What is your attitude to politics? 態度 态度2. a position of the body. The artist painted the model in various attitudes. 姿勢 姿势

attitude

态度zhCN

attitude


cop an attitude

slang To act irritably. Don't cop an attitude with me, young lady, or I'll take away your allowance! All of a sudden, John copped an attitude—I guess he was unhappy with the change in plans.See also: attitude, cop

devil-may-care attitude

A nonchalant attitude, especially toward risks or consequences. I can't believe he went out on his motorcycle in this rain. His devil-may-care attitude is going to get him killed. If you keep up this devil-may-care attitude toward your money, you'll be broke in no time.See also: attitude

with attitude

Especially intense, impressive, or demanding of attention. She has now built an entire media empire on being a nanny with attitude, one who won't tolerate the bad behavior of children or parents alike. It's not quite rock climbing—more like hiking with attitude.See also: attitude

strike an attitude

To assume a dramatic or exaggerated bodily attitude or position, as for a photograph or portrait. After the serious wedding photos were finished, everyone struck a silly attitude for a funny picture. I always feel awkward striking an attitude for these publicity shots. It always feels so forced.See also: attitude, strike

strike a pose

To assume a dramatic or exaggerated bodily attitude or position, as for a photograph or portrait. After the serious wedding photos were finished, everyone struck a silly pose for a funny picture. I always feel awkward striking a pose for these publicity shots. It always feels so forced.See also: pose, strike

attitude-adjuster

A club that can be used to make people comply, often a police officer's baton. Although the officer threatened to use his attitude-adjuster, the group of teens didn't seem remotely scared. In the midst of the chaos was a police officer using his attitude-adjuster to try to direct traffic.

pull an attitude (with one)

To act in an impertinent, disrespectful, or haughty manner (toward one). That cop would have let us go if you hadn't pulled an attitude with her, you idiot! We knew better than to ever pull an attitude with our mom.See also: attitude, pull

have a bad attitude

To tend to be pessimistic. I know I can have a bad attitude, so I'm trying to be more positive these days. If she didn't have such a bad attitude, she could definitely be as good a musician as her sisters.See also: attitude, bad, have

cop an attitude

Sl. to take a negative or opposite attitude about something. My teenage son copped an attitude when I asked why he seemed to be sneaking around.See also: attitude, cop

devil-may-care attitude

 and devil-may-care mannera very casual attitude; a worry-free or carefree attitude. You must get rid of your devil-may-care attitude if you want to succeed. She acts so thoughtless—with her devil-may-care manner.See also: attitude

have a bad attitude

to have a negative outlook on things; to be uncooperative. Perry has a bad attitude and has nothing positive to contribute to the conversation.See also: attitude, bad, have

strike a pose

to position oneself in a certain posture. Bob struck a pose in front of the mirror to see how much he had bulked up. Lisa walked into the room and struck a pose, hoping she would be noticed.See also: pose, strike

wait-and-see attitude

Fig. a skeptical attitude; an uncertain attitude in which someone will just wait to see what happens before reacting. John thought that Mary couldn't do it, but he took a wait-and-see attitude. His wait-and-see attitude seemed to indicate that he didn't really care what happened.See also: attitude

with attitude

If you describe a thing as something or someone with attitude, you mean that they are more impressive or confident than a normal example of that thing. This is going to be sailing with attitude. Patti Smith and Janis Joplin were women with attitude and talent.See also: attitude

strike a ˈpose/an ˈattitude

sit, stand or lie in a position in order to attract attention: He was striking a pose, leaning against the ship’s rail.See also: attitude, pose, strike

attitude-adjuster

n. a police officer’s nightstick; any club. Andy had a black attitude-adjuster hanging from his belt, and I wasn’t going to argue with him.

cop an attitude

tv. to take a negative or opposite attitude about something. (see also tude.) I think you’re copping an attitude. Not advised, dude. Not advised. See also: attitude, cop

pull an attitude

tv. to be haughty; to put on airs. Don’t pull an attitude with me, chum! See also: attitude, pull

attitude


attitude

1. Aeronautics the orientation of an aircraft's axes in relation to some plane, esp the horizontal 2. Ballet a classical position in which the body is upright and one leg raised and bent behind

attitude

a learnt and enduring tendency to perceive or act towards persons or situations in a particular way.

The concept of attitude has provoked much consideration and investigation, both by psychologists and sociologists, as it incorporates individual and social aspects. Psychologists emphasize the conditions under which an individual develops attitudes and integrates them as part of the personality Social psychologists are particularly interested in the way attitudes function within a social Setting. Sociologists associate social behaviours with particular social structures and situations, e.g. class relations.

There is a variety of definitions of attitude (e.g. Allport, 1935; Haber and Fried, 1975; Rokeach, 1960), some imply that holding an attitude leads to behaving in a certain way, others encompass the idea that an attitude may only exist mentally, since overt behaviour can be constrained situationally It is therefore useful to see attitudes as involving three elements:

  1. a cognitive component – beliefs and ideas;
  2. an affective component – values and emotions;
  3. a behavioural component -predisposition to act and actions (Secord and Backman, 1964).

Attitude

 

the state of subjective readiness or predisposition to a given activity in a given situation. Attitudes were first identified in 1888 by the German psychologist L. Lange, who was studying errors of perception. The Soviet psychologist D. N. Uznadze, in working out a general psychological theory of attitudes, presented experimental proof of an individual subject’s general mental readiness to respond to a need activated in a given situation (actual attitudes). Furthermore, Uznadze determined the laws governing the reinforcement of such a state of readiness through the repeated recurrence of situations in which the given need can be satisfied (fixed attitudes). According to Uznadze, attitudes accumulate past experiences and thus mediate the stimulating effect of external conditions, creating a balance between the subject and the environment.

Social attitudes have been the subject of research in the USSR (Sh. Nadirashvili and I. Gomelauri) as well as abroad, where social psychologists (for example, F. Heider, S. Asch, M. Rosenberg, and L. Festinger in the USA) attribute a fixed set of mental attitudes to the individual in relation to society. Such studies have revealed the complex structure of social attitudes, whose components are classified as affective, cognitive, and behavioral (the latter describing readiness for action)—that is, forms of perceptual and behavioral predisposition with respect to social objects and situations. It is presumably possible to distinguish, in the structure of the psyche, a hierarchical system of predispositions to action on various levels of regulation of conduct. This organized system of predispositions consists of the following categories: the most simple and unconscious attitudes toward the simplest situations and objects; the more complex social attitudes that govern social conduct; and the individual’s value orientations, which are products of the interaction between higher social needs and circumstances and which mediate the individual’s overall social behavior in different spheres of activity.

REFERENCES

Uznadze, D. N. Eksperimental’nye osnovy psikhologii ustanovki. Tbilisi, 1961.
Uznadze, D. N. Psikhologicheskie issledovaniia. Moscow, 1966.
Nadirashvili, Sh. A. Poniatie ustanovki v obshchei i sotsial’noi psikhologii. Tbilisi, 1974.
Prangishvili, A. S. Issledovaniia po psikhologii ustanovki. Tbilisi, 1967.
Shikhirev, P. N. “Issledovaniia sotsial’noi ustanovki v SShA.” Voprosy filosofii, 1973, no. 2.
Iadov, V. A. “O dispozitsionnoi reguliatsii sotsial’nogo povedeniia lichnosti.” In the collection Metodologicheskie problemy sotsial’noi psikhologii. Moscow, 1975.
Attitude Organization and Change. New Haven, 1960.
Rokeach, M. “The Nature of Attitudes.” In International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences, vol. 1. New York, 1968.
McGuire, W. J. “The Nature of Attitudes and Attitude Change.” In Handbook of Social Psychology, vol. 3. Reading, 1968.

V. A. IADOV

attitude

[′ad·ə‚tüd] (aerospace engineering) The position or orientation of an aircraft, spacecraft, and so on, either in motion or at rest, as determined by the relationship between its axes and some reference line or plane or some fixed system of reference axes. (geology) The position of a structural surface feature in relation to the horizontal. (graphic arts) The orientation of a camera or a photograph with respect to a given external reference system.

attitude

The angle between the horizontal and the longitudinal axis of an aircraft whether on the ground or when airborne. Climbing attitude, level attitude, flying attitude, and descending attitude are some of the terms that indicate attitude of the aircraft.

attitude


attitude

 [at´ĭ-to̳d] 1. a posture or position of the body; in obstetrics, the relation of the various parts of the fetal body to one another.2. a pattern of mental views established by cumulative prior experience.

at·ti·tude

(at'i-tūd), 1. Position of the body and limbs. 2. Manner of acting. 3. social or clinical psychology a relatively stable and enduring predisposition to behave or react in a certain way toward people, objects, institutions, or issues. [Mediev. L. aptitudo, fr. L. aptus, fit]

attitude

Anatomy
The position and relation of the body and body parts to each other, i.e., posture.
Psychology
A mental disposition or mindset. Attitude is a tendency, based on one’s beliefs and experience, to react to events in certain ways and approach or avoid events that confirm or challenge personal values.

attitude

Psychology “…the tendency towards a mode of response, toward the object in question.” See Abstract attitude.

at·ti·tude

(at'i-tūd) 1. Position of the body and limbs. 2. Manner of acting. 3. psychology A predisposition to behave or react in a certain way toward people, objects, institutions, or issues. [Mediev. L. aptitudo, fr. L. aptus, fit]

at·ti·tude

(at'i-tūd) 1. Position of the body and limbs. 2. Manner of behavior. [Mediev. L. aptitudo, fr. L. aptus, fit]

Attitude


Attitude

A subjective measure of how one or more persons feel about an event, person, or object. Marketers attempt to measure attitudes of consumers to determine the products they may buy. Likewise, analysts measure investor attitudes to estimate future market movements. See also: Sentiment indicator, Behavioral economics.
AcronymsSeeattached

attitude


  • noun

Synonyms for attitude

noun opinion

Synonyms

  • opinion
  • thinking
  • feeling
  • thought
  • view
  • position
  • approach
  • belief
  • mood
  • perspective
  • point of view
  • stance
  • outlook
  • viewpoint
  • slant
  • frame of mind

noun manner

Synonyms

  • manner
  • air
  • condition
  • bearing
  • aspect
  • carriage
  • disposition
  • demeanour
  • mien

noun position

Synonyms

  • position
  • bearing
  • pose
  • stance
  • carriage
  • posture

Synonyms for attitude

noun the way in which one is placed or arranged

Synonyms

  • pose
  • position
  • posture

noun the way in which a person holds or carries his or her body

Synonyms

  • carriage
  • pose
  • posture
  • stance

noun a frame of mind affecting one's thoughts or behavior

Synonyms

  • outlook
  • position
  • posture
  • stance

noun a general cast of mind with regard to something

Synonyms

  • feeling
  • sentiment

Synonyms for attitude

noun a complex mental state involving beliefs and feelings and values and dispositions to act in certain ways

Synonyms

  • mental attitude

Related Words

  • cognition
  • knowledge
  • noesis
  • acceptance
  • credence
  • culture
  • defensive
  • defensive attitude
  • hardball
  • high horse
  • southernism
  • mentality
  • mindset
  • mind-set
  • outlook
  • paternalism
  • stance
  • posture
  • position
  • inclination
  • tendency
  • disposition
  • tolerance
  • intolerance
  • esteem
  • respect
  • regard
  • disrespect
  • reverence
  • irreverence
  • orientation

noun the arrangement of the body and its limbs

Synonyms

  • posture
  • position

Related Words

  • order arms
  • bodily property
  • ballet position
  • decubitus
  • eversion
  • lithotomy position
  • lotus position
  • missionary position
  • pose
  • presentation
  • ectopia
  • asana
  • guard
  • sprawling
  • sprawl
  • stance
  • tuck

noun a theatrical pose created for effect

Related Words

  • affectation
  • affectedness
  • mannerism
  • pose

noun position of aircraft or spacecraft relative to a frame of reference (the horizon or direction of motion)

Related Words

  • orientation
  • trim
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