英:[ɪˈməʊt]
美:[ɪˈmoʊt]
英:[ɪˈməʊt]
美:[ɪˈmoʊt]
e·mote
ih mot
第三人称单数:emotes
现在分词:emoting
过去式:emoted
过去分词:emoted
intransitive verb
to express or simulate emotion, esp. in an exaggerated or theatrical manner.The news anchor was often mocked for the way he emoted over sad stories.
"表现或表达情感",尤其是戏剧性的,1909年,美国英语,由 emotion 反推而来。相关词汇: Emoted; emoting。
back-formation from emotion
The first known use of emote was in 1917
emotionnoun
strong feeling : excitement
a mental reaction (as anger or fear) marked by strong feeling and usually causing physical effects
emotionaladjective
of or relating to the emotions
an emotional upset
likely to show or express emotion : easily moved
an emotional person
causing one to feel emotion
an emotional speech
emotionaladjective
of or relating to the emotions
an emotional upset
likely to show or express emotion : easily moved
an emotional person
causing one to feel emotion
an emotional speech
emoticonnoun
a group of characters (as :-) for a smile) that suggests an attitude or facial expression
emoteverb
to express emotion in or as if in a play
1 Hearts and flowers, mountains of flowers, eventually cede to heartbreak, in the grand Luhrmann tradition, and the actors emote up a summer storm.
2 Playing a bad boy with a heart, he sings, dances, spends time in prison, gets to emote and even falls in love.
3 We see her emoting in a teepee, getting handcuffed to a wall by cowboys and generally making like a blonde Pocahontas in a Roy Rogers-inspired Vogue shoot.
4 Or wonder if the antipsychotics or serotonin uptake inhibitors prescribed to curb their O.C.D. might harm their writing, for isn’t it a writer’s job to emote?
5 Guilfoyle did not snarl, but she shouted and emoted as if trying to be heard in the rafters of a cavernous convention hall even though she was just speaking to a television camera.
6 “It is not a vehicle for ideas or portrayals of emotion outside of its own existence as emoted idea,” he continued.
7 And she’s achieved all this by figuring out a way for network drama to thrive in a challenging era: with smart, pulpy shows that emote like pop ballads, look like America and run like hell.
8 But, she said, “He has this way of emoting when he personifies his characters.”
9 Dylan's "Blood on the Tracks" album also motivated him to sharpen his lyrics, and he began wedding the two styles: folk songwriting and soul emoting.
10 Liam Neeson is an action star with a particular set of skills: he can drive fast, punch hard and emote with a depth that makes his shenanigans seem inspired by Ingmar Bergman.
11 Ms. Rose throws together images and sounds – visions of the cosmos, the audience at a rock concert, Aretha Franklin emoting — to wrestle with issues that trouble our planet, and our lives.
12 If your subject if holding her breath she cannot emote and create natural expressions.
如果总是让模特屏住呼吸的话,她是无法表现出自然的表情的。
13 The performers are not required to do much in the way of emoting.
14 It was important to Damien and to me to not have to do that thing where we show the actor’s face emoting and then we cut to the hands.
15 Aiming for a higher quality than masks allowed, the makeup artist John Chambers developed a new type of foam rubber and created facial appliances that allowed actors to talk and emote.
16 “It has occurred to me that someone should do a study on artists who have to emote for a living and what that does to the central nervous system.”
17 His band members were in a semicircle at some distance from him, providing a self-effacing backup as he emoted at center stage and the songs built to organic, soulful peaks.
18 Ms. Meringolo is not shy about emoting in a grand style.
19 Words can be used to joke or emote as well as inform, and neither scripture nor indeed poetry can be understood by mistaking it for something else.
20 As the story progresses, there are violent explosions and simmering fogs of sound, out of which the voices emerge, emoting at their extremes but ineffably human, too.