morbid的意思和读音

morbid

: [ˈmɔrbɪd] : [ˈmɔː(r)bɪd]

adj.

Adj.+n.morbid interest

adj.cheerful

adj.morose,gloomy,dark,moody,melancholic

morbidadj.

1.having or expressing a strong interest in sad or unpleasant things, especially disease or death

He had a morbid fascination with blood.

‘He might even die.’ ‘Don't be so morbid.’“。”“。”

2.connected with disease

adj.1.;;2.(),;3.;;

adj.1.showing a strong interest in subjects such as death that most people think are unpleasant2.relating to or caused by disease

1. mendicant morbid mythology ...

2. monocyte morbid , , morbidity ...

3. mortuary n morbid n moribund a ...

4. monocyte morbid , , morbidity ...

5. ... insalubrious > morbid > noxious >//

6. appall ---- morbid ---- ail ---- ...

:,,,,,,,

1."Listen, " I say, "be sure to call me when your plane lands safely, OK? Not to be morbid, but . . . ",”,“……”

2.and morbid fear of Japan, tendencies likely to occur at such a time, did actually occur among the Kuomintang.

3.A strong and healthy mind revolts against the morbid view that life is not worth living, that every form of conscious existence is an evil.

4.If anyone lift the cloth from the face of that unpleasant thing it will be in gratification of a mere morbid curiosity.

5.I mean, how would you describe in plain English what morbid violence is, what you have to see in a video game for it to be covered?

6.She was not actually nervous about the wild beast, but she had a morbid dread of performing an atom more service than she had been paid for.

7.Obesity satisfies the definition of morbid obesity when it reaches the point of significant risk for obesity-related comorbidities.

8.He was either of a morbid and enormously unbalanced spirit, or else he was affecting merely the fashionable Weltschmerz of his decade.

9.lavishing many hours of morbid ingenuity, to create an analogy between the object of her affection and the emblem of her guilt and torture.

10.Football itself may not overly excite me but FIFA fills me with morbid fascination.