mood

名词 n. 感叹词 intj.
发音 mo͞od

英文释义

名词 n.
  1. A mental or emotional state, composure.
    — I've been in a bad mood since I was dumped by my ex-boyfriend.
  2. A verb form that depends on how its containing clause relates to the speaker’s or writer’s wish, intent, or assertion about reality.
    — The mood most frequently encountered in English is the indicative, of which the mood in this sentence is an example.
  3. Emotional character (of a work of music, literature, or other art).
    — Whatever the mood of her music, funky or romantic, upbeat or blue, sophisticated or simple, her fans get the message. And as long as the word comes from Natalie, they adore it, turning every one of her albums to gold or platinum.
  4. A sullen, gloomy or angry mental state; a bad mood.
    — He's in a mood with me today.
  5. A disposition to do something, a state of mind receptive or disposed to do something.
    — I'm not in the mood for running today.
  6. A prevalent atmosphere, attitude, or feeling.
    — A good politician senses the mood of the crowd.
  7. A familiar, relatable feeling, experience, or thing. slang
    — “I'm only here for a night. I'm road tripping with a friend and he decided we needed a queer bar, stat.” “Oh, that's a whole mood.”
感叹词 intj.
  1. Used to express that the speaker finds something very relatable. slang
    — ⁠—I am feeling very exhausted today. ⁠—Mood.

词形变化

moods plural moods plural

词源

词源 1
From Middle English mood, mode, mod, from Old English mōd (“mind,” in poetry also “heart, spirit, courage”), from Proto-West Germanic *mōd, from Proto-Germanic *mōdaz (“sense, courage, zeal, anger”), from Proto-Indo-European *moh₁-, *meh₁- (“endeavour, will, temper”).
Cognates
Cognate with Saterland Frisian Moud (“courage”), West Frisian moed (“courage; mind; spirit; will; intention”), Dutch moed (“bravery, courage; mood”), German Mut (“bravery, courage; mood”), German Low German Mood (“boldness, bravery, courage”), Luxembourgish Mutt (“courage”), Yiddish מוט (mut, “bravery, courage”), Danish and Swedish mod (“courage”), Faroese and Icelandic móður (“anger, wrath; fierce mood”), Norwegian Bokmål and Norwegian Nynorsk mot (“courage”), Gothic 𐌼𐍉𐌸𐍃 (mōþs, “mood; anger”), Vandalic *muths (“mind”); also Latin mōs (“behavior, conduct, manner; inclination, temperament; humour, will”), Bulgarian сме́я (sméja, “to dare”), Czech smět (“to be allowed; may”), Macedonian сме́е (smée, “to be allowed”), Polish śmieć (“dare”), Russian сметь (smetʹ, “to dare”), Serbo-Croatian сме̏ти, смје̏ти, smȅti, smjȅti (“to dare, venture”), Slovak smieť (“to be allowed; may”), Slovene smeti (“to be allowed; may”) Ukrainian смі́ти (smíty, “to dare”).
词源 2
Alteration of mode, from Latin modus, with specialized uses in grammar, music and logic.
0 次浏览 数据来源: Wiktionary