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 amuse [ә'mju:z]   添加此单词到默认生词本
vt. 消遣, 娱乐, 使发笑

  1. The boys amuse themselves by drawing caricatures of their teacher.
    男孩子们以画老师的漫画取乐。
  2. The actors were really hamming it up to amuse the audience.
    这些演员为博观众一粲, 表演得实在太过火了.
  3. I amuse myself with reading.
    我借读书来消遣。


amuse
[ verb ]
  1. occupy in an agreeable, entertaining or pleasant fashion

  2. <verb.social> disport divert
    The play amused the ladies
  3. make (somebody) laugh

  4. <verb.communication>
    The clown amused the children


Amuse \A*muse"\ ([.a]*m[=u]z"), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Amused}
([.a]*m[=u]zd"); p. pr. & vb. n. {Amusing}.] [F. amuser to
make stay, to detain, to amuse, [`a] (L. ad) + OF. muser. See
{Muse}, v.]
1. To occupy or engage the attention of; to lose in deep
thought; to absorb; also, to distract; to bewilder. [Obs.]

Camillus set upon the Gauls when they were amused in
receiving their gold. --Holland.

Being amused with grief, fear, and fright, he could
not find the house. --Fuller.

2. To entertain or occupy in a pleasant manner; to stir with
pleasing or mirthful emotions; to divert.

A group of children amusing themselves with pushing
stones from the top [of the cliff], and watching as
they plunged into the lake. --Gilpin.

3. To keep in expectation; to beguile; to delude.

He amused his followers with idle promises.
--Johnson.

Syn: To entertain; gratify; please; divert; beguile; deceive;
occupy.

Usage: To {Amuse}, {Divert}, {Entertain}. We are amused by
that which occupies us lightly and pleasantly. We are
entertained by that which brings our minds into
agreeable contact with others, as conversation, or a
book. We are diverted by that which turns off our
thoughts to something of livelier interest, especially
of a sportive nature, as a humorous story, or a
laughable incident.

Whatever amuses serves to kill time, to lull the
faculties, and to banish reflection. Whatever
entertains usually awakens the understanding or
gratifies the fancy. Whatever diverts is lively
in its nature, and sometimes tumultuous in its
effects. --Crabb.


Amuse \A*muse"\, v. i.
To muse; to mediate. [Obs.]

  1. Pricey resorts in such places as San Diego and Hawaii are providing the equivalent of day camps to amuse junior while parents spend the day golfing or snorkeling.
  2. "We want texts that are well written, with pictures that will amuse the child," she explains.
  3. All are typical 17th-century ceremonial pieces, written with wit, grace and invention to amuse their audiences.
  4. They might have had a taffy pull to amuse themselves during long winter evenings.
  5. The book is chock full of anecdotes, many of them culled from a variety of American publications, in particular back issues of China Business Review; they amuse while shedding light on practical problems.
  6. While adults are building their own video collections, they're also buying tapes to amuse their children: More than a third of the videos sold last year were aimed at kids.
  7. The real New York is a home to 7.5 million, not a cartoon designed to amuse, titillate or horrify.
  8. Now Tosas amuse Yakuza bosses, who will spend as much as Pounds 1 million each on holding a tournament.
  9. The tragedy is that all of it is, to some extent, rather vulgar. Consummate craftsmanship cannot redeem most Faberge from being simply ostentatiously expensive trinkets designed to amuse the jaded palates of Europe.
  10. To amuse Her Highness, Beaumarchais raises the curtain on a little entertainment he has written, an operina called "A Figaro for Antonia."
  11. To amuse the jaded fashion crowd and launch a new watch collection called "Mademoiselle," the Chanel company is opening up the Chanel suite at the Ritz for the week.
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