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 stare [stєә]   添加此单词到默认生词本
vi. 注视, 凝视, 瞪视, 显眼

vt.

n. 凝视

[医] 凝视, 注视




    stare
    [ noun ]
    1. a fixed look with eyes open wide

    2. <noun.act>
    [ verb ]
    1. look at with fixed eyes

    2. <verb.perception> gaze
      The students stared at the teacher with amazement
    3. fixate one's eyes

    4. <verb.body>
      The ancestor in the painting is staring down menacingly


    Stare \Stare\ (st[^a]r), v. t.
    To look earnestly at; to gaze at.

    I will stare him out of his wits. --Shak.

    {To stare in the face}, to be before the eyes, or to be
    undeniably evident. ``The law . . . stares them in the
    face whilst they are breaking it.'' --Locke.


    Stare \Stare\ (st[^a]r), n. [AS. st[ae]r. See {Starling}.]
    (Zo["o]l.)
    The starling. [Obs.]


    Stare \Stare\, n.
    The act of staring; a fixed look with eyes wide open. ``A
    dull and stupid stare.'' --Churchill.

    stare \stare\, v. i. [imp. & p. p. {stared} (st[^a]rd); p. pr. &
    vb. n. {staring}.] [AS. starian; akin to LG. & D. staren,
    OHG. star[=e]n, G. starren, Icel. stara; cf. Icel. stira,
    Dan. stirre, Sw. stirra, and G. starr stiff, rigid, fixed,
    Gr. stereo`s solid (E. stereo-), Skr. sthira firm, strong.
    [root]166. Cf. {Sterile}.]
    1. To look with fixed eyes wide open, as through fear,
    wonder, surprise, impudence, etc.; to fasten an earnest
    and prolonged gaze on some object.

    For ever upon the ground I see thee stare.
    --Chaucer.

    Look not big, nor stamp, nor stare, nor fret.
    --Shak.

    2. To be very conspicuous on account of size, prominence,
    color, or brilliancy; as, staring windows or colors.

    3. To stand out; to project; to bristle. [Obs.]

    Makest my blood cold, and my hair to stare. --Shak.

    Take off all the staring straws and jags in the
    hive. --Mortimer.

    Syn: To gaze; to look earnestly. See {Gaze}.


    Starling \Star"ling\ (-l[i^]ng), n. [OE. sterlyng, a dim. of OE.
    stare, AS. st[ae]r; akin to AS. stearn, G. star, staar, OHG.
    stara, Icel. starri, stari, Sw. stare, Dan. st[ae]r, L.
    sturnus. Cf. {Stare} a starling.]
    1. (Zo["o]l.) Any passerine bird belonging to {Sturnus} and
    allied genera. The European starling ({Sturnus vulgaris})
    is dark brown or greenish black, with a metallic gloss,
    and spotted with yellowish white. It is a sociable bird,
    and builds about houses, old towers, etc. Called also
    {stare}, and {starred}. The pied starling of India is
    {Sternopastor contra}.

    2. (Zo["o]l.) A California fish; the rock trout.

    3. A structure of piles driven round the piers of a bridge
    for protection and support; -- called also {sterling}.

    {Rose-colored starling}. (Zo["o]l.) See {Pastor}.

    1. The photographs, where white faces stare out in sepia tones, portrayed another facet of the major changes at Mather.
    2. They stare daggers at us.
    3. Trainers Laura Perkins and Mark McHugh decided to let him stop and stare after the killer whale ignored several instructions to go on with the show.
    4. Indeed, until recently, the duty of "stare decisis" was the best guarantee that judges would not make up the law willy-nilly.
    5. Like children they come forward, touch and stare, chatter and giggle to themselves.
    6. "I figure I've put 100,000 hours into all this, and I've never taken a dime out," said Soucy strolling among the cages under the penetrating stare of his patients.
    7. The chairman of the Volkswagen management board makes his point, turns on the stare and falls silent.
    8. For special effect, to underline their most dramatic or important lines, they'll stare straight ahead at those rows of cameras _ and hope their memories don't fail them.
    9. Ocean Avenue, the winding, thin road where the Bush family lives, is often lined with cars bearing people who sit and stare by the hour at the Bush estate.
    10. Barry watched the 39-year-old Moore with a stony stare as she described their relationship.
    11. Most people have become accustomed to the soldiers, who stare blankly out from under their helmets as they stand guard at street corners or patrol boulevards and back alleys.
    12. Then they were made to stare at stacks of court documents in the firm's suit against the TSC defectors, according to one of the partners.
    13. Many ski to the edge, and stare into the abyss, feeling that mixture of fear and excitement luring them nearer the point of no return.
    14. The liberal view of stare decisis was captured in an infamous 24-hour precedent.
    15. Outside, the thunder splits the heavens, as the tormented lovers stare deep into each other's eyes.
    16. "I'd just stare at them in wonder _ I couldn't imagine such freedom, such a carefree life _ and wish more than anything that I had that kind of freedom, that I could walk away and be like them. So there were sad moments in my childhood," he said.
    17. I've been blessed." People stare when Peter Dingeman walks into a room.
    18. The sergeant is an intense teacher who rewards students with a withering stare when they give an out-of-the-ballpark answer to her questions.
    19. But Paraguayans of all ages and political persuasions left their homes to celebrate, to satisfy curiousity and to simply stare at the damage left by nearly five hours of heavy fighting between rebels and loyalist troops.
    20. Leif Ljungkvist, who was stopped at a traffic light when he heard the shooting, said he saw a man standing near the fallen premier stare for several seconds before turning slowly away and fleeing up a side street.
    21. School children visit it on tours and stare at the pictures of Jews executed by the British before Israel was founded in 1948.
    22. The importance of prudential considerations such as stare decisis is that they mitigate the manner in which this nature creates an incentive to activism.
    23. They stare at the ground and whisper one-word answers.
    24. When history teacher Makoto Niimaki tells a bawdy joke about hicks in 19th-century Japan, his students stare blankly.
    25. The spokeswoman said that, while Bush likely didn't hear any of the speech, "I'm sure we'll tell him about it." "He wanted to stare at a fish eye, not the CBS eye or the NBC peacock," Ms. Tate said.
    26. Only a few locals stare at the bearded clergymen and the busloads of tourists.
    27. As the mad man who murders the miser to avoid the stare of his fishy blue eye, Berkoff is as well matched as a sweater to Edinburgh.
    28. Nurse Bernice Stupperich, testifying Friday in the trial of Paula Marie Sims, recalled her "cold, blank stare" when she saw newborn Heather.
    29. Anderson's attorney, Jon Botula, said Anderson was incited to kill by numerous viewings of the movie, which stars Malcolm McDowell as a marauding young Briton with a vacant stare who acts on his violent impulses.
    30. Plywood eyes now stare out over the city where the windows once were.
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