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daydreaming

/dey-dreem/US // ˈdeɪˌdrim //UK // (ˈdeɪˌdriːm) //

白日梦,白日做梦,做白日梦,遐想

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : a reverie indulged in while awake.
v.无主动词 verb
  1. 1
    • : to indulge in such a reverie.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • If you could peer into a particle physicist’s daydream, you might spy a vision of a giant lunar particle accelerator.

  • For Hughes Van Ellis, Fletcher’s younger brother, who was an infant when the family left Tulsa, the prosperous Greenwood of his sister’s childhood was a daydream constructed from the stories and memories of others.

  • The Pong match could be held online and broadcast on Twitch, the streaming service for gamers, where Copeland has a profile and daydreams of becoming a star with thousands of followers.

  • I know I am not the only one with daydreams about the “next normal.”

  • We would lie together in his tiny bed and daydream of my postgraduation move to Boston.

  • But others dismiss them, saying this is nothing but the daydream of people who long for some peace.

  • We tend to daydream all the time, speculating about the future and dwelling on the past.

  • The key is how much we can brood, and what is meant by brooding—is it to daydream, or is it to agonize over every detail?

  • You can, and the Kremlin wants you, to daydream inside the matrix of a sham democracy.

  • It made me daydream about a Mitt Romney who had a spine and what he'd say.

  • Do not go through life in a daydream, but keep a sharp lookout for things of interest and value.

  • I shoved my mind into low gear and started to think idle thoughts, letting myself sort of daydream.

  • To console myself I read and re-read your letters and daydream about the future.

  • Wholly absorbed in her daydream, Flicit Gauvrit did not perceive that she had nearly reached home.

  • It is a tough assignment for a child to know where a daydream ends and impossibility begins!