stressed 的 3 个定义
- importance attached to a thing: to lay stress upon good manners.
- Phonetics. emphasis in the form of prominent relative loudness of a syllable or a word as a result of special effort in utterance.
- Prosody. accent or emphasis on syllables in a metrical pattern; beat.
- (10)
- to experience stress or worry: Don't stress about the turkey; I promise it will be delicious.Dad is always stressing out over his job.
stressed 近义词
accentuate, emphasize
put under physical or mental pressure
更多stressed例句
- Romeo was studying rats to see if stress affects adolescent and adult brains differently.
- A small amount of stress may actually help kids build mental toughness.
- The stress spiked hormone levels in both age groups similarly.
- Workers are reporting longer hours, more stress, and an inability to disconnect.
- That poses a stress to the animals because they’re selected for intense production—to produce milk or grow fast and produce a lot of muscle and fat.
- At the time of the initial strikes, U.S. officials stressed repeatedly that the Americans were after Khorasan, not al Nusra.
- But the president also stressed the importance of hope and optimism.
- Udall had stressed the line of attack so frequently that he was dubbed “Mark Uterus,” and it clearly backfired.
- Greenberg stressed that the show was about offering solutions.
- Frieden stressed once again that the virus can be stopped and that it is not airborne.
- First of all is the forceful utterance of the stressed syllable; the Provençal has post-tonic syllables, unlike the sister-speech.
- The fine arts subjects such as painting and music were stressed in the seminaries.
- Religion, on the other hand, has stressed mystery and accepted it in its own terms.
- You use more force for the stressed than for the unstressed vowels, that is to say, you put more breath into them.
- Something stirred in Jason's mind, with the feeling of a long unused muscle being stressed.