单词 | emote |
释义 | emote (once / 81 pages) v To emote is to express emotion, particularly when you're acting in a film or a play. If an actor doesn't emote, the audience can't tell how he's supposed to be feeling in a scene. When people emote, it sometimes appears overdone or melodramatic. Taking a feeling and exaggerating it so that an audience can understand the character's emotions is what actors do when they emote. The noun emotion came first, and the theatrical verb emote followed in the early twentieth century. The Old French root word is emouvoir, or "stir up," from the Latin emovere, "move out, remove, or agitate." WORD FAMILYemote: emoted, emotes, emoting, emotion, emotive+/emotion: emotional, emotionless, emotions/emotional: emotionalism, emotionality, emotionally, overemotional, unemotional/emotionalism: emotionalisms/emotionality: unemotionality/emotionless: emotionlessly, emotionlessness/unemotional: unemotionally USAGE EXAMPLESYou have to do a lot of acting and emoting, not just for you, but for them too. Los Angeles Times(Nov 23, 2016) Jon plays rock god on “Hallelujah,” bearing his chest in short rolled shirt sleeves, reaching for the crowd as he emotes with his hands. Seattle Times(Nov 16, 2016) Of the many public figures I’ve seen, Reno managed better than any to emote this sense of authenticity. Slate(Nov 07, 2016) v give expression or emotion to, in a stage or movie role Hyper act, play, represent play a role or part |
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