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malaise

/ma-leyz, -muh-; French ma-lez/US // mæˈleɪz, -mə-; French maˈlɛz //UK // (mæˈleɪz) //

发热,发热症,发烧,发热病

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : a condition of general bodily weakness or discomfort, often marking the onset of a disease.
    • : a vague or unfocused feeling of mental uneasiness, lethargy, or discomfort.

Synonyms & Antonyms

noundepression, sickness

Examples

  • The accelerating digital transformation, reduxFrom that malaise we turn to the SaaS and cloud world.

  • The United States was in the middle of a deep and pervasive malaise, never really regaining its footing after the wholesale destruction of the Summer of Love.

  • Because the years between 2010 to 2015 were a period of steady economic growth and falling unemployment, it’s unlikely that economic malaise was a factor.

  • It remains to be seen whether government support has merely delayed heavy losses, or created a bridge for consumers and business until they to get to the other side of the economic malaise.

  • Add in worry over the global economic malaise, and the 2020 harvest is shaping up to be one of the most troublesome in memory.

  • It is a nostalgic, old-fashioned novel that nevertheless reflects the malaise of its era and prefigures our own technophiliac age.

  • Maybe each of these instances was a cry for help, almost certainly they were symptoms of a much deeper malaise.

  • Moral equivalence and malaise, rather than red-hot ideology, motivates Haydon.

  • In both syndromes, early signs include fever and profound malaise.

  • To combat the malaise, fast food joints are pursuing a high-low strategy, or, as I prefer to dub it, the “Moms and Bros” strategy.

  • There may be fever associated with weakness, headache, general malaise and pain, and this may be marked or rather light.

  • The majority were more than momentarily tired, they were visibly suffering from some sort of malaise.

  • I think my malaise is chiefly owing to the depressing influence of town air and town scenes.

  • Whatever vices I have seem to be exaggerated by my malaise—such "chastening" not answering the purpose of purification in my case.

  • The King's physical malaise, however, is accompanied by a curious mental agitation and a strange loquacity.