释义 |
rhap·so·dy I. \ˈrapsədē, -di\ noun (-es) Etymology: Latin rhapsodia, from Greek rhapsōidia, from rhapsōidos rhapsodist (from rhaptein to sew, stitch together + ōidē ode, song) + -ia -y; akin to Greek rhepein to bend, incline, rhapis rod, Old Norse orf, orb handle of a scythe, Old High German worf handle of a scythe, Lithuanian verpti to spin, and probably to Latin repens sudden — more at ode 1. : a recitation or song of a rhapsodist : a portion of an epic poem (as a book of the Iliad or Odyssey) adapted for recitation 2. archaic : a literary work consisting of disconnected pieces; also : a miscellaneous collection or disconnected series : medley, jumble < a rhapsody of words — Shakespeare > 3. a. : an ecstatic or highly emotional utterance or literary work : effusively incoherent and extravagant discourse < a speech that bordered upon rhapsody > < recite a long rhapsody to the joys of viewing America from a caboose — R.P.Cooke > < the novel ends in a kind of meditative rhapsody — Mark Schorer > b. : rapture, ecstasy < reading poetry often seems a state of rhapsody in which rhyme and meter and sound stir the mind as wine and dance stir the body — Virginia Woolf > 4. : an instrumental composition that is irregular in form like an improvisation or free fantasia Synonyms: see bombast II. verb (-ed/-ing/-es) : rhapsodize |