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单词 vanquish
释义

Definition of vanquish in English:

vanquish

verb ˈvaŋkwɪʃˈvæŋkwɪʃ
[with object]literary
  • Defeat thoroughly.

    征服,击败

    he successfully vanquished his rival

    他成功地击败了对手。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The sooner the world understands it, the sooner we will be able to vanquish these forces of evil.
    • As at least three art historians allege, St. George never vanquished a dragon, as legend asserts.
    • Researchers may also better understand the forces that vanquished the Ice Age ecosystem.
    • His troops had vanquished their opponents, now the Army and its prisoners were on their way home.
    • Uncertainty vanquishes notions of exclusivity and superiority.
    • Arguments are used constructively to clarify issues, not to vanquish opponents.
    • He's out of ammo and doomed for sure, and there's 15 guys on him, and he vanquishes them all with his will and might.
    • Gaining the prize requires vanquishing your opponents, and your strength is inversely proportional to theirs.
    • Evidence from researchers at Hull University suggests many people benefit from relaxation therapy, hypnotherapy and guided imagery in which patients are taught to visualise their bodies' defences vanquishing tumours.
    • Finally, Christ will return, vanquishing the Anti-Christ and ushering in the thousand-year reign of Christ on Earth.
    • Life appears to vanquish the hope and ideals of all men, dragging in its train even the greatest, like Plato, Alexander, or Napoleon.
    • As time goes on, it's become clear that he sees his role less as making sure our soldiers vanquish the enemy than making sure he vanquishes the press and the straw men he puts so much rhetorical energy into creating.
    • He did not flinch as the verdict was read to a hushed court - and his hopes of divine intervention were vanquished.
    • Certain diseases that we thought we had vanquished years ago are coming back.
    • Its report, in the spring, is likely to demand radical change in relations between the rich and poor world if abject poverty is to be vanquished.
    • Defeat at Trafalgar ended any hope of maritime supremacy for France, and thus any realistic hope of vanquishing the British, but Napoleon continued to steamroller his continental opponents.
    • Medical technology has enabled scientific medicine to vanquish its rivals in the medical marketplace in the quest for patient patronage and health insurance funds.
    • But while vanquishing the enemy on the field of battle is necessary, it is not sufficient.
    • It's all very well to speak of patriotism, of duty and of vanquishing the forces of evil when you're safe in a bunker thousands of miles away from the possibility of action.
    • Council procedures and culture should emphasize discussion and accommodation rather than scoring debater's points and vanquishing one's opponents.
    Synonyms
    conquer, defeat (utterly), beat (hollow), trounce, annihilate, triumph over, win a resounding victory over, be victorious over, best, get the better of, worst, bring someone to their knees, overcome, overwhelm, subdue, subjugate, put down, quell, quash, crush, repress, rout
    informal lick, hammer, clobber, thrash, paste, pound, pulverize, crucify, demolish, destroy, drub, give someone a drubbing, cane, wipe the floor with, walk all over, give someone a hiding, take to the cleaners, blow someone out of the water, make mincemeat of, murder, massacre, slaughter, flatten, turn inside out, tank
    British informal stuff
    North American informal blow out, cream, shellac, skunk, slam
    US informal own

Derivatives

  • vanquishable

  • adjective ˈvaŋkwɪʃəb(ə)lˈvæŋkwɪʃəb(ə)l
    literary
    • It took also any sense I might have had that life and fate were controllable, that evil was vanquishable.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The temptation is to wage war on stupidity as if it were a vanquishable object.
      • The points are still there, and enemies are still vanquishable, but the goal now is to finish the games so that we can see and hear the narrative of the story.
      • I will always consider vanquishable the law of diminishing returns.
      • They discussed the neuroscientific and the behavioural, the syntactical and the imaginative, declared illiteracy to be utterly vanquishable, and showed why some teaching methodology works best.
  • vanquisher

  • noun ˈvaŋkwɪʃəˈvæŋkwɪʃər
    literary
    • Lacking the fitness and finesse of England's vanquishers, the Edinburgh side soon found the northerners fighting their way back into the game.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Meg was unable to stop herself from throwing that challenge in her vicious vanquisher's face.
      • It may be illustrative to return to the career of the Emperor Phocus - and that of his vanquisher and successor, the Emperor Heraclius.
      • Wielding his mighty blade, he is the redeemer of souls and the vanquisher of Satan.
      • My husband, who has seen this same vanquisher of toothaches, told me tales of a small dark office, all of which made those little bats in my stomach flutter faster.

Origin

Middle English: from Old French vencus, venquis (past participle and past tense of veintre), vainquiss- (lengthened stem of vainquir), from Latin vincere 'conquer'.

  • victory from Middle English:

    A medieval word that goes back to Latin victoria ‘victory’. The ultimate root was Latin vincere ‘to conquer’, also the source of convince (mid 16th century), convict (Late Middle English), evict (early 16th century), and vanquish (Middle English). Dig for Victory was a British slogan of the Second World War which urged people to grow their own food to make up for the loss of imports. A Pyrrhic victory is a victory won at too great a cost. It comes from Pyrrhus, a king of Epirus, part of present-day Greece. Pyrrhus invaded Italy in 280 bc and defeated the Romans at the battle of Asculum, though only after such heavy losses that after the battle he is said to have exclaimed: ‘One more such victory and we are lost.’ Queen Victoria, whose name is the Latin for ‘victory’, and whose long reign lasted from 1837 to 1901, gave her name to the Victorian era. A support for Victorian values, often summed up as hard work, social responsibility, and strict morality, is associated with former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, who said in 1983: ‘I was asked whether I was trying to restore Victorian values. I said straight out I was. And I am.’

Definition of vanquish in US English:

vanquish

verbˈvæŋkwɪʃˈvaNGkwiSH
[with object]literary
  • Defeat thoroughly.

    征服,击败

    Mexican forces vanquished the French army in a battle in Puebla
    Example sentencesExamples
    • He did not flinch as the verdict was read to a hushed court - and his hopes of divine intervention were vanquished.
    • Life appears to vanquish the hope and ideals of all men, dragging in its train even the greatest, like Plato, Alexander, or Napoleon.
    • Its report, in the spring, is likely to demand radical change in relations between the rich and poor world if abject poverty is to be vanquished.
    • Finally, Christ will return, vanquishing the Anti-Christ and ushering in the thousand-year reign of Christ on Earth.
    • The sooner the world understands it, the sooner we will be able to vanquish these forces of evil.
    • Medical technology has enabled scientific medicine to vanquish its rivals in the medical marketplace in the quest for patient patronage and health insurance funds.
    • Council procedures and culture should emphasize discussion and accommodation rather than scoring debater's points and vanquishing one's opponents.
    • His troops had vanquished their opponents, now the Army and its prisoners were on their way home.
    • As at least three art historians allege, St. George never vanquished a dragon, as legend asserts.
    • Arguments are used constructively to clarify issues, not to vanquish opponents.
    • Certain diseases that we thought we had vanquished years ago are coming back.
    • Researchers may also better understand the forces that vanquished the Ice Age ecosystem.
    • But while vanquishing the enemy on the field of battle is necessary, it is not sufficient.
    • Uncertainty vanquishes notions of exclusivity and superiority.
    • Evidence from researchers at Hull University suggests many people benefit from relaxation therapy, hypnotherapy and guided imagery in which patients are taught to visualise their bodies' defences vanquishing tumours.
    • He's out of ammo and doomed for sure, and there's 15 guys on him, and he vanquishes them all with his will and might.
    • Gaining the prize requires vanquishing your opponents, and your strength is inversely proportional to theirs.
    • Defeat at Trafalgar ended any hope of maritime supremacy for France, and thus any realistic hope of vanquishing the British, but Napoleon continued to steamroller his continental opponents.
    • It's all very well to speak of patriotism, of duty and of vanquishing the forces of evil when you're safe in a bunker thousands of miles away from the possibility of action.
    • As time goes on, it's become clear that he sees his role less as making sure our soldiers vanquish the enemy than making sure he vanquishes the press and the straw men he puts so much rhetorical energy into creating.
    Synonyms
    conquer, defeat, defeat utterly, beat, beat hollow, trounce, annihilate, triumph over, win a resounding victory over, be victorious over, best, get the better of, worst, bring someone to their knees, overcome, overwhelm, subdue, subjugate, put down, quell, quash, crush, repress, rout

Origin

Middle English: from Old French vencus, venquis (past participle and past tense of veintre), vainquiss- (lengthened stem of vainquir), from Latin vincere ‘conquer’.

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更新时间:2024/12/27 18:03:58