doom

英 [duːm] 美 [dʊm]
  • n. 厄运;死亡;判决;世界末日
  • vt. 注定;判决;使失败
  • n. (Doom)人名;(泰)伦
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doom
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1. mood (心情) 不好的话当过来看就变成了 doom (厄运)了。
2. 因此要保持一个很好的心情、情绪,因为不好的心情会影响你的行为、做事方式,进而可能导致doom (厄运)的产生。
3. 所以我们一定要保持一个好心情(in cheerful mood),心情不好(in bad mood)的时候,厄运就会来临(Doom is coming soon)。
4. mood <===> doom: 即使厄运降临,也要保持好心情。
doom 厄运,劫数

来自PIE*dhe, 做,放置,词源同do, deem.用于指律法,后指圣经中的Judgment Day,引申词义劫数。

doom
doom: [OE] Doom derives ultimately from *-, the Germanic base from which the verb do comes. This originally meant ‘put, place’, and so Germanic *dōmaz signified literally ‘that which is put’. By the time it reached Old English as dōm a more concrete sense ‘law, decree, judgment’ had developed (this lies behind the compound doomsday ‘day of judgment’ [OE], whose early Middle English spelling has been preserved in Domesday book). The modern sense ‘(evil) fate’ first appeared in the 14th century.
=> deem, do
doom (n.)
Old English dom "law, judgment, condemnation," from Proto-Germanic *domaz (cognates: Old Saxon and Old Frisian dom, Old Norse domr, Old High German tuom, Gothic doms "judgment, decree"), from PIE root *dhe- "to set, place, put, do" (cognates: Sanskrit dhaman- "law," Greek themis "law," Lithuanian dome "attention;" see factitious). A book of laws in Old English was a dombec. Modern sense of "fate, ruin, destruction" is c. 1600, from the finality of the Christian Judgment Day.
doom (v.)
late 14c., from doom (n.). Related: Doomed; dooming.
1. Why are people so full of gloom and doom?
为什么人们如此沮丧悲观?

来自柯林斯例句

2. A sense of impending doom came upon all of us.
我们所有人都有一种大难临头的感觉。

来自柯林斯例句

3. A sense of imminent doom was inescapable.
一种即将来临的毁灭感无可逃避。

来自柯林斯例句

4. to meet your doom
死亡

来自《权威词典》

5. The report on our economic situation is full of doom and gloom.
这份关于我们经济状况的报告充满了令人绝望和沮丧的调子.

来自《简明英汉词典》