meditate 的 2 个定义
med·i·tat·ed, med·i·tat·ing.
- to engage in thought or contemplation; reflect.
- to engage in transcendental meditation, devout religious contemplation, or quiescent spiritual introspection.
med·i·tat·ed, med·i·tat·ing.
- to consider as something to be done or effected; intend; purpose: to meditate revenge.
meditate 近义词
contemplate
更多meditate例句
- Her “ethics of care,” as she called it, involved encouraging the boys to take music lessons, read books and even meditate when she could persuade them to join her.
- Somehow, he finds time every day to exercise for an hour and to meditate.
- You can become someone who exercises and meditates every day and always drinks eight glasses of water.
- For the best results, consider turning off all push notifications at least while you’re meditating, and perhaps even for longer stretches of time surrounding your practice.
- The most bare-bones way to meditate is to focus on your breathing.
- Von Furstenberg generally refuses to meditate on the meaning of life.
- As a Christian, I try to meditate or pray at least once a day, however briefly.
- There are yogis who actually meditate, pray, and are deeply concerned with the survival and well-being of our planet.
- But the more you meditate on it, the deeper its wisdom becomes.
- After I meditate, I shoot a strong espresso and go to the desk.
- Much less would it help you to meditate upon the pure and holy things of God.
- If it suits your evolutions, aunt Kitty and myself meditate a Sussex journey next week.
- But some mornings I make observations through the tent flap that I cannot stay in bed to meditate on.
- Again he began to meditate an attempt to escape, and on a certain evening, set off from the convent.
- They then reviled him, and spurned him away from their sight, and began to meditate measures of violence against him.