单词 | depression |
释义 | depressionWord family noun depression depressant depressive depressoradjective depressed depressing depressant depressive depressibleverb depress adverb depressingly , Meteorology, Illness & disability Psychology, psychiatryde·pres·sion /dɪˈpreʃən/ ●●○ W3 AWL noun 1 [countableC, uncountableU] a) MPa medical condition that makes you very unhappy and anxious and often prevents you from living a normal life 抑郁症 women who suffer from post-natal depression (=that sometimes happens after the birth of a baby) 患产后抑郁症的女性 b) SAD/UNHAPPYa feeling of sadness that makes you think there is no hope for the future 忧郁,沮丧,消沉 Lucy’s mood was one of deep depression. 露西的情绪极度消沉。 2. the (Great) Depression FAILthe period during the 1930s when there was not much business activity and not many jobs 〔20 世纪30年代的〕大萧条 Examples from the Corpus the (Great) Depression• She earned up to $ 250 per speech, a handsome sum during the Great Depression.• They will be concentrated in the same industries and come on stream as the economy is beginning its recovery from the depression.• Besides, labor disgraced itself in the Great Depression.• The lowered mood itself increases access to negative memories, serving to maintain the depression.• In the very depths of the Depression the owner decided to build a new theater.• In the midst of the Depression, none of the Gennaros does anything to support the family.• Keynes was intuitively convinced that public works would lift Britain out of the depression.• High scores on the depression scale suggest that treatment other than anxiety management might also be considered. 3 [countableC, uncountableU]FAIL a long period during which there is very little business activity and a lot of people do not have jobs 经济萧条期,不景气时期 → recession the devastating effects of economic depression 经济萧条的灾难性影响 4 [countableC]HOLE a part of a surface that is lower than the other parts 洼地,凹坑 depressions in the ground 地面上的坑 5. [countableC]HEM technical a mass of air under low pressure, that usually causes rain 低气压 Examples from the Corpus depression• You could see a depression in the ground where the helicopter had landed.• a depression in the sand• The family had a history of alcoholism and depression.• Mild symptoms of anxiety and depression are often associated with social difficulties.• Denial, anger, depression, something and acceptance.• She suffers from periods of deep depression, when she locks herself away and will speak to no one for weeks.• Carcinoma, methadone, diabetes, depression, miscarriage and angina have poured down as unremittingly as the weather.• an economic depression• He has been suffering from depression since his wife died last year.• During the past few decades, prescription drugs have also been widely used to control the symptoms of depression.• Produces a quick rush of euphoria followed by a rapid depression of mood.• My father had suffered from severe depression for many years.• The nails had dug deeply into the palms, leaving bloodless, crescent-shaped depressions behind.• In Germany the depression in the late 1920s helped Hitler's rise to power.• The depressions in the sand are made by turtles, that come up here to lay their eggs.• Keiffer's book is about her battle with depression.• This may involve dealing with depression, disappointment and many other feelings that have arisen since retirement.• Hartnell blamed his financial difficulties on the worldwide depression. post-natal depression• First, it wasn't good for the baby you were carrying; afterwards, post-natal depression.• These are probably made worse by post-natal depression and feelings of loneliness.• In July, looking thin and strained, the Princess is said to be suffering from post-natal depression during the Balmoral holidays.• I had post-natal depression, and I was tired and everything.• Croft, possibly also believing this after the evidence of death fell into his own post-natal depression.• Visits Heidi's mum Christine, who is unable to care for baby because of severe post-natal depression, visits every day. economic depression• Churchill's move to the Board of Trade in 1908 coincided with the return of acute economic depression.• We feel there will be an economic depression.• And now it had been in a deep economic depression for years.• The country was in the grip of economic depression, and in June 1921 there were more than two million out of work.• Ironically a period of severe economic depression may be advantageous, in one sense at least.• The disorder was aggravated by the economic depression of the 1930s.• Did unemployment, economic depression and the General Strike reduce trade unionism to a pitiful weakness? From Longman Business Dictionary depressionde·pres·sion /dɪˈpreʃən/ noun [countableC, uncountableU] 1ECONOMICSa long period of time during which there is very little business activity and a lot of people do not have jobs The current economic depression can be turned around if companies can be persuaded to invest in the industry. The nation as a whole was suffering from a period of deep depression following a boom which had peaked six or seven years before. → compare recession2the (Great) Depression the period from 1929 to 1934 during which economic activity was very low and unemployment reached very high levels in the US and Europe The American silk market collapsed in 1929/30 following the onset of the Great Depression. Commodity prices were at their lowest since the Great Depression. |
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