英:[ˌpæθə'lɒdʒɪklɪ]
美:[ˌpæθə'lɒdʒɪklɪ]
英:[ˌpæθə'lɒdʒɪklɪ]
美:[ˌpæθə'lɒdʒɪklɪ]
adv.
病理学地
由疾病引起地
莫名其妙地
反常地
adjective
of or relating to pathology A pathological examination led to the diagnosis.
pathological research
altered or caused by diseasealso: indicative of disease pathological symptoms
pathological changes in the body
being such to a degree that is extreme, excessive, or markedly abnormal pathological fear
a pathological liar
New Latin pathologicus "of the study of the passions, of the study of diseases" (borrowed from Greek pathologikós, from patho- patho- + -logikos, from -logia -logy + -ikos -ic >entry 1) + -al >entry 1
The first known use of pathological was in 1656
pathologynoun
the study of diseases and especially of the changes in the body produced by them
something abnormalespecially: the disorders in structure and function that occur in a particular disease
pathologistnoun
a specialist in pathology
pathologistnoun
a specialist in pathology
pathologicaladjective
of or relating to pathology
changed or caused by disease
being such to a degree that is extreme, excessive, or abnormal
a pathological liar
1 At Christie’s in New York on Wednesday, many of this pathologically private woman’s worldly goods — some of which she ordered up while in the hospital and never even saw — will be sold at public auction.
2 Shiver is as if someone has scrubbed away at Marling until only the most insubstantial wisp remains, and it's so pathologically inoffensive that I am actually offended.
3 She’s meant to be cold and calculating, but Zendaya has an inherent warmth that sometimes undercuts the chilly, pathological obsession with winning that defines Tashi’s raison d’etre.
4 “Clean House,” the stern grandfather of home-purge shows, has largely restricted itself to Southern California, where indeed there may be more rooms to fill with stuff, but certainly not in as pathologically a fashion.
5 The New York Times reported Tuesday night that "Spider-Man Turn Off the Dark," the pathologically troubled musical, will again postpone its Broadway opening, likely until June.
6 He is one of those phenomena that rise regularly in history to confound us with the possibility—and black comedy—of potent evil: conscienceless, cruel and pathologically dishonest.
7 According to the Wrap, it will be "a sci-fi take on this classic story about a creature produced through a scientific experiment", and Radcliffe's character is "pathologically dirty and dressed in old clown's clothing".
8 My conclusion: he was too pathologically mean to turn the lights on, let alone redecorate.
我的结论: 他吝啬得过于病态,甚至连灯都不愿意开, 更不用说装修房间了.
9 Q: Didn’t you once call yourself pathologically independent?
10 Jaffe arranges for his son to marry the daughter of an adjacent kingdom's general who has been raised from birth to be pathologically compliant.
11 I am an obnoxious kind of conversation snob and have a pathologically low threshold for small talk.
12 Important like: here is a woman – a pathologically, chillingly self-aware 21st century female person – not in hiding.
13 There's a logic of self-pitying ingratiation at work here; after all, he reasons, hasn't every Spanish movie since 1975 been about "killing, literally or symbolically, some pathologically strict, repressed, and violent father"?
14 The long slog facing an aspiring astronaut, she said, calls for the same traits that were useful as she pressed lawmakers: she describes herself as “patient and pathologically optimistic”.
15 Yet who was this pathologically reclusive artist?
那么这位隐居成癖的艺术家是何许人也呢?
16 She describes herself as "a pathologically law-abiding woman".
17 Kat is hard, detached from her feelings, obsessed with perfection and almost pathologically opposed to surrender.
18 No matter how many times their dreams are dashed, the Bluths are pathologically incapable of giving up hope.
19 Jack’s also a petty crook, a negligent father and a pathologically selfish manipulator.
20 I was, as I've mentioned, a pathologically obedient and conventional child, and of course I knew that I should call an ambulance.
1 病理上
3 病态地