释义 |
lan·guor \ˈlaŋ(g)ə(r), ˈlaiŋ-\ noun (-s) Etymology: Middle English langour, langor, from Old French, from Latin languor, from languēre to feel faint, languish — more at slack 1. obsolete : enfeebling disease : suffering 2. : a state of the body or mind caused by exhaustion or disease and characterized by a languid feeling : lassitude < languor of convalescence > 3. : listless indolence : dreaminess < certain languor in the air hinted at an early summer — James Purdy > 4. : dullness, sluggishness : lack of vigor : stagnation < from languor she passed to the lightest vivacity — Elinor Wylie > |