| 释义 | esperance
 es·per·anceE0214100 (ĕs′pər-əns)n. Obsolete  Hope.[Middle English esperaunce, from Old French, from Vulgar Latin *spērantia, from Latin spērāns, spērant-, present participle of spērāre, to hope; see spē- in Indo-European roots.]
 esperance(ˈɛspərəns) narchaic hope or expectation[C15: from Old French, from Vulgar Latin sperantia (unattested), from Latin spērāre to hope, from spēs hope]hope(hoʊp)
 n.,  v.  hoped, hop•ing. n.    1.  the feeling that what is wanted can be had or that events will turn out well.    2.  a particular instance of this feeling:  the hope of winning.    3.  grounds for this feeling in a particular instance:  There is little hope of his recovery.    4.  a person or thing in which expectations are centered:  The medicine was her last hope.    5.  something that is hoped for.  v.t.    6.  to look forward to with desire and reasonable confidence.    7.  to believe, desire, or trust:  I hope you will be happy.  v.i.    8.  to feel that something desired may happen:  We hope for an early spring.    9.  Archaic. to place trust; rely (usu. fol. by in).  Idioms:   hope against hope, to continue to hope when the situation appears bleak.  [before 900; Middle English; Old English hopa, c. Old Frisian, Middle Dutch hope, Middle High German hoffe]  hop′er, n.    hop′ing•ly, adv.   EncyclopediaSeeHopeMedicalSeeHOPEThesaurusSeehope
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