释义 |
en·er·gy I. \ˈenə(r)jē, -ji\ noun (-es) Etymology: Late Latin energia, from Greek energeia activity, operation, from energos active, effective, from en in + ergon work — more at in, work 1. of language or style : imaginative or affective force : vitality 2. : the capacity of acting, operating, or producing an effect : inherent power < an individual of great intellectual energy > < he expended his energies in useless tasks > 3. : power efficiently and forcefully exerted : vigorous or effectual operation : vigorousness < the energy and success of an argument > 4. a. : the realized state of potentialities as opposed to their unrealized state — compare entelechy b. (1) : activity; especially : psychical activity (2) : the product of activity : effect 5. : an entity rated as the most fundamental of all physical concepts and usually regarded as the equivalent of or the capacity for doing work either being associated with material bodies (as a coiled spring or speeding train) or having an existence independent of matter (as light or X rays traversing a vacuum), its physical dimensions being the same as those of work ML2÷T2 where M is mass, L length, and T time, usually being expressed in work units (as foot-pounds or ergs), and in any form being endowed with the properties of mass (as inertia, momentum, gravitation) by relativity which assigns to the energy E an equivalent mass m by the equation m=E÷c2 where c is the speed of light — see conservation of energy, kinetic energy, potential energy 6. : muzzle energy Synonyms: see power II. noun : usable power ; also : the resources for producing such power |