英:[rɪˈprest]
美:[rɪˈprɛst]
英:[rɪˈprest]
美:[rɪˈprɛst]
adj.
被抑制的,被压抑的
v.
抑制( repress的过去式和过去分词 )
约束
镇压
制止
词根:repress
adj.repressive 镇压的;压抑的;抑制的
n.repression 抑制,[心理] 压抑;镇压
repressor 镇压者
repressing 重压;补加压力;[机] 再压
v.repressing 抑制;镇压;约束(repress的ing形式)
vi.repress 抑制;镇压
vt.repress 抑制;镇压(叛乱等);约束
Adjective
1. characterized by or showing the suppression of impulses or emotions;
"her severe upbringing had left her inhibited"
"a very inhibited young man, anxious and ill at ease"
"their reactions were partly the product of pent-up emotions"
"repressed rage turned his face scarlet"
1660年代,“受限制的,受到控制的”,过去分词形容词来自 repress(v.)。心理学上的“被保持在无意识中,被保持在潜意识中”的意义可追溯至1904年。
The first known use of repressed was in 1606
reprieve1 of 2verb
to delay the punishment of (as a condemned prisoner)
to give relief or deliverance to for a time
reprieve2 of 2noun
the act of reprieving : the state of being reprieved
a postponing of a prison or death sentence
a temporary escape (as from pain or trouble)
repressornoun
one that repressesespecially: a protein that keeps a special region of a chromosome from acting to start the manufacture of messenger RNA
repressverb
to check by or as if by pressure
injustice was repressed
to put down by force : subdue
to hold in by self-control
repressed a laugh
to prevent the natural or normal expression, activity, or development of
repress one's anger
to shut out of consciousness
repressed a painful past
repressverb
to check by or as if by pressure
injustice was repressed
to put down by force : subdue
to hold in by self-control
repressed a laugh
to prevent the natural or normal expression, activity, or development of
repress one's anger
to shut out of consciousness
repressed a painful past
repressverb
to check by or as if by pressure
injustice was repressed
to put down by force : subdue
to hold in by self-control
repressed a laugh
to prevent the natural or normal expression, activity, or development of
repress one's anger
to shut out of consciousness
repressed a painful past
repressionnoun
the act of repressing : the state of being repressed
a process of the mind by which painful or disturbing thoughts or desires are kept from conscious awareness
repressverb
to check by or as if by pressure
injustice was repressed
to put down by force : subdue
to hold in by self-control
repressed a laugh
to prevent the natural or normal expression, activity, or development of
repress one's anger
to shut out of consciousness
repressed a painful past
repressverb
to check by or as if by pressure
injustice was repressed
to put down by force : subdue
to hold in by self-control
repressed a laugh
to prevent the natural or normal expression, activity, or development of
repress one's anger
to shut out of consciousness
repressed a painful past
repressedadjective
subjected to or marked by repression
a repressed child
characterized by a keeping in check
repressedadjective
subjected to or marked by repression repressed anger
a repressed child
1 There’s a theme in them of the nice guy with the dark turn of mind, self-conscious about his need to please, dealing with the stresses of being a repressed guy in an increasingly un-repressed culture.
2 Nina’s loves are seen as repressed and illicit, her successes are shown as triumphs in an unnatural and injurious art form, and she is duly punished for these transgressions.
3 I repressed greed, it became pride.
我压抑了贪婪,它变成傲慢。
4 The English are emotionally repressed, the Irish emotional and Americans are fat.
5 As the repressed king tentatively begins to tell Logue about his emotionally frigid upbringing, tired old stereotypes are given the spotlight.
6 which they had repressed, because they were too frightening.
回忆施加了压力,因为它们太恐怖了
7 In the shadows of her house, the solitary widow who at one time had been the confidante of his repressed loves and whose persistence had saved his life was a specter out of the past.
8 The filmmaker Nancy Savoca thought the Emmy Award winner and Tony Award nominated actress would be perfect to play an uptight, repressed young woman who lives in an antiseptic apartment.
9 Further, “repression can create emotional problems that are unidentified, because the person forgets the cause, which was repressed,” adds behavioral psychologist Gail Gross.
10 Lewis is the scowling linchpin, the imperious, emotionally repressed scion of a wealthy Victorian clan who can’t win the love of the woman he weds.
11 Its climactic drama glances off a theme from “Moonlight,” the torment of repressed homosexual desire and of the need to prove straightness to straight males by means of violence.
12 Moore, who died in 1972 at 84, seemed like the relic of a repressed, elitist age.
13 “The desire to celebrate together through music will not be repressed,” he said.
14 Judging from a recently conducted straw poll, however, my repressed, mob-capped fondness for Charlotte's heroine leaves me firmly in the minority.
15 But the play’s roiling undercurrents — of melancholy, frustration, romantic longing, repressed primal urges — still resonate.
16 Funny, cleverly structured and a little melancholy, the series turns out to be a surprisingly poignant meditation on repressed trauma and self-actualization.
17 Set in late-19th-century Germany, “Spring Awakening” focuses on a collection of repressed teenagers roiling with sexual anguish.
18 He repressed his dream of a Yuletide bloodbath, but once he escaped the claustrophobic maw and settled back home, visions of chain saws whirred in his head, setting off a chain reaction of story ideas.
19 Islamists had been heavily repressed for decades, with hundreds jailed as opposition figures.
20 I routinely repressed thoughts that I could be the rebound girl or a place holder for him until the real deal came along.
1 受约束的
2 克制
patient control school stay command subdue mortify abnegate hold in check quiet controlled measured repressive restrained restraint repression abnegation check contain deny refrain repress forbear hold in choke back
4 受压迫的
5 约束
commitment constraint cramp rein bind hold restrict govern curb restrain fetter keep in check button down
6 受抑压
8 压抑的
9 受约束