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词汇 depress
释义

Definition of depress in English:

depress

verb dɪˈprɛsdəˈprɛs
[with object]
  • 1Make (someone) feel utterly dispirited or dejected.

    使沮丧,使消沉

    that first day at school depressed me

    上学第一天使我心情沮丧。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • At first it depressed me that people gauged their popularity by how many texts they received, but on further reflection I realised that it's nothing new.
    • That was completely demoralising, it shattered my confidence, and I was depressed for a year.
    • I am sick to death of mud and rain and grey skies - it depresses me.
    • Sheila said: ‘It depresses us looking out on the mess every day.’
    • The fact that I know this depresses me more than you can imagine.
    • It depresses me to hear on the news the number of people murdered or dying violently.
    • It depresses me because of events from over a year ago.
    • Sit her down and explain how much this is depressing you.
    • Far from depressing me or driving me away from the faith, I found these controversies enormously heartening.
    • Besides, all these photos from summer are depressing me - remember when the sky was blue?
    • This is a thought that depresses me a little bit.
    • It just depresses me that so many people waste so much time bleating inanely and helplessly when there are lives to go out and live.
    • I've been away from my social life for so long now that I'm starting to forget how to have fun and that's seriously depressing me.
    • Don't put the songs on… they are seriously depressing me.
    • It just depresses me to lose customers because of this.
    • It depresses me to think of people trying to sell papers by dredging up bad things or bad news.
    • It depresses me thinking about how I will cope with the situation following the recent government decision to increase prices.
    • The contrast depresses me.
    • He said: ‘I do quite like Christmas, but sometimes it depresses me, sometimes it makes me feel like more of a loser than I do already.’
    • Thinking these dark thoughts doesn't depress me; in fact, I'm a happy person.
    Synonyms
    make sad, sadden, make unhappy, cast down, get down, make gloomy, make despondent, dispirit
    dampen someone's spirits, break someone's spirit, dash someone's hopes, dishearten, demoralize, discourage, daunt, crush, shake, desolate, make desolate, weigh down, weigh heavily on, hang over, oppress
    upset, distress, grieve, haunt, harrow, cause suffering to, break someone's heart, make someone's heart bleed, bring tears to someone's eyes
    informal give someone the blues, make someone fed up, knock the stuffing out of, knock for six, knock sideways
    archaic deject
  • 2Reduce the level or strength of activity in (something, especially an economic or biological system)

    使(经济)萧条,使不景气;抑制(生物系统),压抑

    fear of inflation in America depressed bond markets

    对美国通货膨胀的恐惧使证券市场不景气。

    alcohol depresses the nervous system

    酒精压抑神经系统。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • General anesthesia causes peripheral vessels to dilate by depressing the sympathetic nervous system.
    • These actions further depress economic activity, prices, corporate cash flows and the ability of borrowers to service debts.
    • Income taxes lead to economic costs because they tend to depress the overall level of employment in the economy.
    • Unfortunately, it actually aggravates the sense of business anxiety and fear and the reinforcing restraint which will depress economic activity further.
    • Acutely, it depresses the central nervous system and can also precipitate cardiac arrhythmia.
    • Treatments that depress the immune system leave the body unguarded against illness and even common infections can be extremely dangerous.
    • High or rising rates of interest will have a negative influence on effective demand and depress the economy.
    • Against that, the higher taxes needed to pay back all that debt are going to depress the economy.
    • Dumping shares further depresses already depressed markets, crystallising losses in the process.
    • But they also are aware that large tax increases at this time of economic stagnation and rising unemployment would depress economic activity even further.
    • Falling stocks may further depress the world's economies
    • Consumer demand will be depressed as stock prices retreat, leading to lower levels of net household wealth.
    • All this intensifies the economic slump and depresses prices further.
    • In fact, an excess of these helpful minerals may even depress your immune system and exacerbate the infection process.
    • Chemotherapy will only depress her immune system further.
    • Inflationary policies conducted for long periods of time not only foster the growth of government but also depress economic activity.
    • Alcohol itself is a depressant, therefore combining it with a barbiturate can depress the nervous system to such an extent that it ceases functioning altogether.
    • Overall, the effect was to depress global economic activity, but we're getting over it.
    • Inhalants are breathable chemical vapors that can produce a quick, powerful high, usually by depressing the central nervous system.
    • Studies show sedative herbs gently depress the central nervous system, thus calming you and inducing sleep.
    Synonyms
    slow down, slow up, reduce, lower, weaken, sap, devitalize, impair, deflate
    limit, check, curb, bridle, inhibit, restrict
    reduce, lower, cut, cheapen, put down, keep down, mark down, discount, deflate, depreciate, devalue, diminish, downgrade
    informal slash, axe
  • 3Push or pull (something) down into a lower position.

    压低,拉下

    depress the lever

    按下操作手柄。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Your thumb will depress the magazine release lever as you grasp the magazine.
    • The right hand depresses the locking latch, then lowers the grip frame.
    • The unit removes easily by simply depressing a lever and turning it 90 degrees.
    • As the slide is pulled to the rear, depress the ejector at the right rear of the frame.
    • Integral with the map is the audio component that allows a visitor to locate, select, and depress buttons that activate voice descriptions of specific areas of the building or exhibit.
    • The centre lever is depressed to set the trigger, then the rope is looped around the bowstring and locked into the jaw.
    • He just did not have the weight to depress the lever.
    • It must also be in the proper position to depress the plunger on the deadlocking latch.
    • At once, the driver lightly depressed the accelerator and they pushed away from the curb into the bustling city traffic.
    • To fold simply push the sight down, depress the button, and lock the sight into place.
    • When you open up previously inaccessible areas by turning a lever or depressing a block, the camera unlocks its view from the character.
    • When the grip safety is depressed the rod is pushed up and lifts the firing pin block located in the slide.
    • To use the extinguisher, you pull out the safety pin and depress the operating lever.
    • When the bread is inserted and the toaster levers depressed it will begin singing and flashing its lights.
    • A quick adjustment of his grip and his thumb depressed the button that released the loaded magazine, allowing it to drop an inch out of the weapon.
    • Taria pressed and depressed the bomb trigger twice, and everyone could hear the double clunk of the bombs falling out of the bomb bay.
    • To drive it forward you simply depress a lever with your right thumb; the further you push it, the faster you go.
    • The front of the faceplate easily detaches by depressing a small button on either side and pulling it forwards.
    • When the grip safety is depressed it lifts a small lever that lies beside the hammer and is held in place by the hammer pin.
    • However, with the safety engaged, depressing this lever allows the bolt to be operated.
    Synonyms
    push (down), press (down), exert pressure on, lower, hold down
    thumb, tap
    operate, activate, actuate

Derivatives

  • depressible

  • adjective
    • User selectable switches for setting the desired functional operation of the apparatus and a manually depressible panic button are also provided.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • At least one of the tray and label is flexibly depressible at the separator and cell for pressing the other lead against the cell to temporarily energize the LED.
      • It has a small, depressible head piece, with a narrow channel running through it.

Origin

Late Middle English: from Old French depresser, from late Latin depressare, frequentative of deprimere 'press down'.

  • press from Middle English:

    Both press and print (Middle English) can be traced back to Latin premere, ‘to press’, as can pressure (Late Middle English). Journalists and the newspaper industry have been known as the press, in reference to printing presses, since the late 18th century, although before that a press was a printing house or publisher. Another name for journalists, used since the 1830s or 1840s, is the fourth estate. It was originally used of the then unrepresented mass of people: Henry Fielding wrote in 1752 ‘None of our political writers…take notice of any more than three estates, namely, Kings, Lords, and Commons…passing by in silence that very large and powerful body which form the fourth estate in this community…The Mob.’ By the middle of the 19th century it was firmly established for the press. Carlyle wrote in 1841 ‘Burke said there were three Estates in Parliament, but in the Reporters’ Gallery…there sat a fourth Estate more important far than they all.’ Burke has been credited with the term, but no evidence beyond Carlyle has yet been found. Press the flesh is US slang from the 1920s meaning ‘to shake hands’. These days it is generally used of celebrities or politicians greeting crowds by shaking hands with random people. The heyday of the press gang, a group employed to force men to join the navy, was the 18th and early 19th centuries, but the first record of the term comes before 1500. Press-ganging people was really a form of arbitrary conscription, a word that appears in Late Middle English in the literal sense of ‘writing down together’ from Latin con ‘with’ and scribere ‘write’, but which was only introduced in the modern sense of compulsory enlistment in Britain in 1916, during the First World War, although the word was first recorded in 1800. Depress (Late Middle English) has the basic sense of ‘press down’.

Definition of depress in US English:

depress

verbdəˈpresdəˈprɛs
[with object]
  • 1Make (someone) feel utterly dispirited or dejected.

    使沮丧,使消沉

    that first day at school depressed me

    上学第一天使我心情沮丧。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • It depresses me to think of people trying to sell papers by dredging up bad things or bad news.
    • Sheila said: ‘It depresses us looking out on the mess every day.’
    • He said: ‘I do quite like Christmas, but sometimes it depresses me, sometimes it makes me feel like more of a loser than I do already.’
    • Sit her down and explain how much this is depressing you.
    • At first it depressed me that people gauged their popularity by how many texts they received, but on further reflection I realised that it's nothing new.
    • It just depresses me that so many people waste so much time bleating inanely and helplessly when there are lives to go out and live.
    • It just depresses me to lose customers because of this.
    • I've been away from my social life for so long now that I'm starting to forget how to have fun and that's seriously depressing me.
    • This is a thought that depresses me a little bit.
    • Don't put the songs on… they are seriously depressing me.
    • Far from depressing me or driving me away from the faith, I found these controversies enormously heartening.
    • I am sick to death of mud and rain and grey skies - it depresses me.
    • It depresses me to hear on the news the number of people murdered or dying violently.
    • Thinking these dark thoughts doesn't depress me; in fact, I'm a happy person.
    • The contrast depresses me.
    • That was completely demoralising, it shattered my confidence, and I was depressed for a year.
    • It depresses me because of events from over a year ago.
    • It depresses me thinking about how I will cope with the situation following the recent government decision to increase prices.
    • The fact that I know this depresses me more than you can imagine.
    • Besides, all these photos from summer are depressing me - remember when the sky was blue?
    Synonyms
    make sad, sadden, make unhappy, cast down, get down, make gloomy, make despondent, dispirit
  • 2Reduce the level or strength of activity in (something, especially an economic or biological system)

    使(经济)萧条,使不景气;抑制(生物系统),压抑

    fear of inflation in America depressed bond markets

    对美国通货膨胀的恐惧使证券市场不景气。

    alcohol depresses the nervous system

    酒精压抑神经系统。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Against that, the higher taxes needed to pay back all that debt are going to depress the economy.
    • But they also are aware that large tax increases at this time of economic stagnation and rising unemployment would depress economic activity even further.
    • All this intensifies the economic slump and depresses prices further.
    • Studies show sedative herbs gently depress the central nervous system, thus calming you and inducing sleep.
    • Overall, the effect was to depress global economic activity, but we're getting over it.
    • Chemotherapy will only depress her immune system further.
    • Acutely, it depresses the central nervous system and can also precipitate cardiac arrhythmia.
    • Income taxes lead to economic costs because they tend to depress the overall level of employment in the economy.
    • These actions further depress economic activity, prices, corporate cash flows and the ability of borrowers to service debts.
    • Unfortunately, it actually aggravates the sense of business anxiety and fear and the reinforcing restraint which will depress economic activity further.
    • Inflationary policies conducted for long periods of time not only foster the growth of government but also depress economic activity.
    • Dumping shares further depresses already depressed markets, crystallising losses in the process.
    • Treatments that depress the immune system leave the body unguarded against illness and even common infections can be extremely dangerous.
    • Alcohol itself is a depressant, therefore combining it with a barbiturate can depress the nervous system to such an extent that it ceases functioning altogether.
    • General anesthesia causes peripheral vessels to dilate by depressing the sympathetic nervous system.
    • Consumer demand will be depressed as stock prices retreat, leading to lower levels of net household wealth.
    • In fact, an excess of these helpful minerals may even depress your immune system and exacerbate the infection process.
    • Falling stocks may further depress the world's economies
    • Inhalants are breathable chemical vapors that can produce a quick, powerful high, usually by depressing the central nervous system.
    • High or rising rates of interest will have a negative influence on effective demand and depress the economy.
    Synonyms
    slow down, slow up, reduce, lower, weaken, sap, devitalize, impair, deflate
    reduce, lower, cut, cheapen, put down, keep down, mark down, discount, deflate, depreciate, devalue, diminish, downgrade
  • 3Push or pull (something) down into a lower position.

    压低,拉下

    depress the lever

    按下操作手柄。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • To fold simply push the sight down, depress the button, and lock the sight into place.
    • The right hand depresses the locking latch, then lowers the grip frame.
    • When the grip safety is depressed the rod is pushed up and lifts the firing pin block located in the slide.
    • A quick adjustment of his grip and his thumb depressed the button that released the loaded magazine, allowing it to drop an inch out of the weapon.
    • However, with the safety engaged, depressing this lever allows the bolt to be operated.
    • When the bread is inserted and the toaster levers depressed it will begin singing and flashing its lights.
    • Your thumb will depress the magazine release lever as you grasp the magazine.
    • When the grip safety is depressed it lifts a small lever that lies beside the hammer and is held in place by the hammer pin.
    • When you open up previously inaccessible areas by turning a lever or depressing a block, the camera unlocks its view from the character.
    • The unit removes easily by simply depressing a lever and turning it 90 degrees.
    • At once, the driver lightly depressed the accelerator and they pushed away from the curb into the bustling city traffic.
    • He just did not have the weight to depress the lever.
    • Taria pressed and depressed the bomb trigger twice, and everyone could hear the double clunk of the bombs falling out of the bomb bay.
    • The front of the faceplate easily detaches by depressing a small button on either side and pulling it forwards.
    • To drive it forward you simply depress a lever with your right thumb; the further you push it, the faster you go.
    • The centre lever is depressed to set the trigger, then the rope is looped around the bowstring and locked into the jaw.
    • Integral with the map is the audio component that allows a visitor to locate, select, and depress buttons that activate voice descriptions of specific areas of the building or exhibit.
    • As the slide is pulled to the rear, depress the ejector at the right rear of the frame.
    • To use the extinguisher, you pull out the safety pin and depress the operating lever.
    • It must also be in the proper position to depress the plunger on the deadlocking latch.
    Synonyms
    push, push down, press, press down, exert pressure on, lower, hold down

Origin

Late Middle English: from Old French depresser, from late Latin depressare, frequentative of deprimere ‘press down’.

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