hebetude如何读

英:['hebɪtju:d]

美:['hebɪˌtjud]

hebetude是什么意思

  • n.愚蠢

hebetude自然拼读

heb·e·tude

he b tud

hebetude扩展

hebetudinous (adj.)

hebetude英英释义

noun

the condition or quality of being dull or lethargic, esp. in mind; listlessness.

hebetude词源中文解释

1620年代,源自拉丁语 hebetudo,是由 hebes 的名词形式组成的,意为“钝的,迟钝的; 愚蠢的”,这个词的起源不详。相关词汇: Hebetudinous。

hebetude_医学行业词汇

[拉hebetudo]迟钝,精神迟钝:精神分裂症的特征

hebetude词源英文解释

Late Latin hebetudo, from hebēre to be dull; akin to Latin hebes dull

The first known use of hebetude was circa 1621

hebetude医学词典英英释义

hebetudenoun

the absence of mental alertness and affect (as in schizophrenia)

hebetude 例句

1 He sat upon a low chair, his long legs, his violet-circled eyes staring out with a look of hebetude and overwhelming fatigue.

2 Summer alone could bring them together again—the one from the dry gloom of the barn, the other from the cold seclusion of its wintry hebetude.

3 It is interesting to note that, during the bulk of her psychosis, her only complaints were of mental hebetude and dizziness.

4 We are on the eve of a Jubilee Year, when the halcyon shall plume his wing, and we shall hear much oratorical trash and hebetude about the peacefulness of this happy reign.

5 These are the predominant symptoms: hebetude or low, muttering delirium, picking at the bed-clothes, involuntary evacuations, stertor, and the like.

6 The triumphant Iaveh kept Adam and Eve and all their seed in a condition of hebetude and terror.

7 Even in her dullest moments of physical and mental hebetude she felt something pressing upon her from within for accomplishment, like a piece of unfinished business that she must presently rouse herself to put through.

8 Such children, in their mental hebetude and physical degeneracy, suggest a degree of cretinism.

9 More hebetude; tongue more coated with brownish fur, red at tip; bowels continue costive; opened by an enema. 31st.

10 Benumbed, exhausted, sunk in hebetude, she waited until she could wait no more, until intolerable suspense drove her blindly.

11 Jaffery rose from his knees and regarded her in the hebetude of reaction.

12 As the disease progresses the hebetude becomes more profound and is overcome with greater difficulty.

13 "A debauched old fellow," says Friedrich; "gone all to hebetude by his labors in that line; agrees always with the last speaker."

14 Less common are the following: mental hebetude, lasting some days or even weeks after the close of the last paroxysm, or, as in a case of Carter's, gradually increasing mental feebleness, terminating in imbecility.

15 Great hebetude and torpor have marked some epidemics.

16 The leaden weight of an irremediable idleness descended upon General Feraud, who having no resources within himself sank into a state of awe-inspiring hebetude.

17 faced with a class forever enveloped in a miasma of apathy and intellectual hebetude, the professor had little hope of kindling an interest in medieval European history

18 Some degree of mental hebetude is rarely absent, even in the mildest cases of typhoid fever, and is usually among its earliest symptoms.

19 From that solitude, full of despair and terror, he was torn out brutally, with kicks and blows, passive, sunk in hebetude.

20 This hebetude of all faculty was the merciful, protecting method that Nature took with her, dimming the lamp of consciousness until the wounded creature could gain sufficient resiliency to bear a full realization of life.

hebetude 同义词

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