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 passion ['pæʃәn]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 激情, 酷爱, 热爱, 强烈感情, 耶稣受难(故事)



    passion
    [ noun ]
    1. a strong feeling or emotion

    2. <noun.feeling>
    3. the trait of being intensely emotional

    4. <noun.attribute>
    5. something that is desired intensely

    6. <noun.state>
      his rage for fame destroyed him
    7. an irrational but irresistible motive for a belief or action

    8. <noun.motive>
    9. a feeling of strong sexual desire

    10. <noun.feeling>
    11. any object of warm affection or devotion

    12. <noun.cognition>
      the theater was her first love
      he has a passion for cock fighting
    13. the suffering of Jesus at the Crucifixion

    14. <noun.state>


    Passion \Pas"sion\, n. [F., fr. L. passio, fr. pati, passus, to
    suffer. See {Patient}.]
    1. A suffering or enduring of imposed or inflicted pain; any
    suffering or distress (as, a cardiac passion);
    specifically, the suffering of Christ between the time of
    the last supper and his death, esp. in the garden upon the
    cross. ``The passions of this time.'' --Wyclif (Rom. viii.
    18).

    To whom also he showed himself alive after his
    passion, by many infallible proofs. --Acts i. 3.

    2. The state of being acted upon; subjection to an external
    agent or influence; a passive condition; -- opposed to
    action.

    A body at rest affords us no idea of any active
    power to move, and, when set is motion, it is rather
    a passion than an action in it. --Locke.

    3. Capacity of being affected by external agents;
    susceptibility of impressions from external agents. [R.]

    Moldable and not moldable, scissible and not
    scissible, and many other passions of matter.
    --Bacon.

    4. The state of the mind when it is powerfully acted upon and
    influenced by something external to itself; the state of
    any particular faculty which, under such conditions,
    becomes extremely sensitive or uncontrollably excited; any
    emotion or sentiment (specifically, love or anger) in a
    state of abnormal or controlling activity; an extreme or
    inordinate desire; also, the capacity or susceptibility of
    being so affected; as, to be in a passion; the passions of
    love, hate, jealously, wrath, ambition, avarice, fear,
    etc.; a passion for war, or for drink; an orator should
    have passion as well as rhetorical skill. ``A passion fond
    even to idolatry.'' --Macaulay. ``Her passion is to seek
    roses.'' --Lady M. W. Montagu.

    We also are men of like passions with you. --Acts
    xiv. 15.

    The nature of the human mind can not be sufficiently
    understood, without considering the affections and
    passions, or those modifications or actions of the
    mind consequent upon the apprehension of certain
    objects or events in which the mind generally
    conceives good or evil. --Hutcheson.

    The term passion, and its adverb passionately, often
    express a very strong predilection for any pursuit,
    or object of taste -- a kind of enthusiastic
    fondness for anything. --Cogan.

    The bravery of his grief did put me
    Into a towering passion. --Shak.

    The ruling passion, be it what it will,
    The ruling passion conquers reason still. --Pope.

    Who walked in every path of human life,
    Felt every passion. --Akenside.

    When statesmen are ruled by faction and interest,
    they can have no passion for the glory of their
    country. --Addison.

    5. Disorder of the mind; madness. [Obs.] --Shak.

    6. Passion week. See {Passion week}, below. --R. of Gl.

    {Passion flower} (Bot.), any flower or plant of the genus
    {Passiflora}; -- so named from a fancied resemblance of
    parts of the flower to the instruments of our Savior's
    crucifixion.

    Note: The flowers are showy, and the fruit is sometimes
    highly esteemed (see {Granadilla}, and {Maypop}). The
    roots and leaves are generally more or less noxious,
    and are used in medicine. The plants are mostly tendril
    climbers, and are commonest in the warmer parts of
    America, though a few species are Asiatic or
    Australian.

    {Passion music} (Mus.), originally, music set to the gospel
    narrative of the passion of our Lord; after the
    Reformation, a kind of oratorio, with narrative, chorals,
    airs, and choruses, having for its theme the passion and
    crucifixion of Christ.

    {Passion play}, a mystery play, in which the scenes connected
    with the passion of our Savior are represented
    dramatically.

    {Passion Sunday} (Eccl.), the fifth Sunday in Lent, or the
    second before Easter.

    {Passion Week}, the last week but one in Lent, or the second
    week preceding Easter. ``The name of Passion week is
    frequently, but improperly, applied to Holy Week.''
    --Shipley.

    Syn: {Passion}, {Feeling}, {Emotion}.

    Usage: When any feeling or emotion completely masters the
    mind, we call it a passion; as, a passion for music,
    dress, etc.; especially is anger (when thus extreme)
    called passion. The mind, in such cases, is considered
    as having lost its self-control, and become the
    passive instrument of the feeling in question.


    Passion \Pas"sion\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Passioned}; p. pr & vb.
    n. {Passioning}.]
    To give a passionate character to. [R.] --Keats.


    Passion \Pas"sion\, v. i.
    To suffer pain or sorrow; to experience a passion; to be
    extremely agitated. [Obs.] ``Dumbly she passions, frantically
    she doteth.'' --Shak.

    1. He then dismisses criticism of these decisions, which he sees as arising from the erroneous assumption "that the court's function is to replace law with moral passion, even if that moral passion produces dubious results."
    2. He then dismisses criticism of these decisions, which he sees as arising from the erroneous assumption "that the court's function is to replace law with moral passion, even if that moral passion produces dubious results."
    3. Some of this furniture is on show, but the great Pugin sideboard was destroyed in the Windsor fire of 1992. Pugin's early passion for the Gothic was not a stylistic obsession but a conviction that Gothic was an architecture of principle.
    4. The flavour of his childhood, and the dawning of the passion for rivers, are exquisitely captured in the opening chapter of An Open Creel, Waters Of Youth.
    5. Although he once called Bach his "bible" and Chopin his "first musical food," Szeryng also had a passion for contemporary music.
    6. Enthusiasm of the sort is a fault on the right side: Mr Gatti plainly loves the opera, and urges the audience to share his passion. Royal Opera House, Covent Garden.
    7. Was he concerned a passion for Fitzgerald equals "petty bourgeois ideology"?
    8. Rep. Mervyn Dymally, D-Calif., recently inserted into the Record a confession of passion for wrestling in general, and for one wrestler in particular.
    9. The lexical passion thrives in this country in a pragmatic way.
    10. Where others would have been content to have their novels glisten with the charm of the 'native', Gurnah's novel throbs with the passion of a visionary.
    11. Far from having dimmed or dated, as yesterday's chic successes are wont to do, it gleams and glistens with wit, intelligence, comic sparkle and a deep sympathy with the absurd intricacies of human passion.
    12. Ms. Bernhard sings a variety of pop songs with great passion, then provides a hilarious commentary on the subtext of those songs.
    13. In an interview published in Tuesday editions of The New York Times, Bush said, "I think I've sublimated some of the passion I feel, and I'm very open-minded as to what to do about it.
    14. It's about a Mexican farmer who helps re-create the passion of Christ during Lent, which leads to a crucifixion.
    15. "No other world city is characterized by as total a calm, as total an absence of political passion in matters of international politics," former U.S. diplomat George Wynne wrote during his 1970s posting in Geneva.
    16. The danger is that you put across an image much worse than reality. Pick a subject you believe in. Something you can put a bit of passion and emotion into.
    17. The Berkeley police don't have any leads but doubt the crime was driven by a passion for sweets.
    18. He plans to go to South America and grow passion flowers, a family temptingly short of good hybrids. All the same, there are rooted cuttings of every magnolia over in the glasshouse, ready to move.
    19. Exhausted and grief-stricken, Armenians who have come to help their brothers in this devastated city are stirred to passion when talk of their suffering touches on the conflict with Azerbaijan.
    20. Economic interests explain some of the residents' passion.
    21. Staying with drama as our example, there is a bleak absence of passion, personal communication, and vision.
    22. Dogs and cats are my passion.
    23. Along comes a young mountebank, Billy Starbuck, who promises he can bring rain, and meanwhile takes Lizzie off for a night of passion on his lorry.
    24. Rabbi Max N. Schreier, president of the Rabbinical Council of America, says American Jews lack passion for helping Jews from the Soviet Union resettle in Israel.
    25. The state's Criminal Justice Board voted last month to stop furloughs for inmates convicted of homicides in "crimes of passion." But in most states, the uproar over furloughs died with the Dukakis campaign.
    26. The moustachioed Marxist leader spoke with unprecedented candor on numerous other issues, gesticulating with passion, occasionally smiling and laughing.
    27. It surely arouses a suspicion, at least, of substitute sexual passion. The movie stutters around this question as it does around the dainty, ever-flowing tea table in Hurt's low-ceilinged home.
    28. It still sounds pretty rum to me, coming from a man who committed his life to, and built his international fame upon, a passion for geese. Peter Scott was a famous man for 40 years.
    29. With fury; with passion; with anger: but probably without too much effect.
    30. Marcher organizers and supporters acknowledged that abortion opponents have waged a highly organized campaign to reverse the Supreme Court's 1973 decision, but they say Sunday's rally demonstrated pro-choice advocates' passion and commitment.
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