drowse

n. 瞌睡 vi. 打瞌睡 vt. 使瞌睡

发音

US /ˈdɹaʊ̯z/
其它
UK /ˈdɹaʊ̯z/
US /ˈdɹæʊ̯z/
AU /ˈdɹæʊ̯z/
NZ /ˈdɹæʊ̯z/
ZA /ˈdɹaːz/

词形变化

drowses 复数 drowsed drowses 三单 drowses drowseth drowsing drowsing 现在分词 drowsed 过去式 drowsed 过去分词 drowsest drowsedst 过去式 drowseth 三单 drowsed 复数

释义与例句

n.
  1. 1.

    An act, or a state, of being drowsy or sleepy.

    in a drowse

  2. 2.

    A state of dullness or inactivity, as if from sleepiness.

    比喻
v.
  1. 1.

    To make (someone or something) heavy with drowsiness or sleepiness.

    及物
  2. 2.

    Followed by away: to pass (time) drowsily or in sleeping; also, to proceed (on a way) drowsily or sleepily.

    及物
  3. 3.

    To make (someone or something) dull or inactive, as if from sleepiness.

    比喻 及物
  4. 4.

    Often followed by away or off: to be drowsy or sleepy; to be half-asleep.

    不及物
  5. 5.

    To be dull or inactive, as if from sleepiness.

    比喻 不及物

词汇关系

名词

同义词 1

上位词 1

动词

同义词 2

上位词 3

下位词 1

词源

The verb is either: * a back-formation from drowsy, which is attested earlier; or * possibly from Middle English *drousen (no known attestations), from Old English drūsan, drūsian (“to droop, sink; to become feeble, inactive, low, or slow, drowse”), from Proto-Germanic *drūsijaną (“to look down; mourn”) (possibly merged with *dreusaną (“to fall”)), from Proto-Indo-European *dʰrewHs- (“to break off; to fall down”). The noun is derived from the verb. cognates * Danish drøse (“to be negligent; to slow down”) * Dutch drozen (“to doze; muse”) * German trauern (“to mourn, be sad”) * Gothic 𐌳𐍂𐌹𐌿𐍃𐌰𐌽 (driusan, “to fall; to fall down”) * Norwegian døse (“to drowse”) * Old English drēosan (“to fall; to perish; to rush”) (whence Middle English dresen (“to fall down”)) * Swedish drösa (“to be slow”)

来源:wiktionary