All the girls in our school adore the handsome mathematics teacher who happens to be a bachelor. 我们学校里所有女孩子都崇拜那个恰巧是单身汉的英俊数学老师。
I adore the little boy. 我非常喜欢这个小男孩。
adore
[ verb ] love intensely <verb.emotion> he just adored his wife
Adore \A*dore"\, v. t. To adorn. [Obs.]
Congealed little drops which do the morn adore. --Spenser.
adore \a*dore"\ ([.a]*d[=o]r"), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {adored} ([.a]*d[=o]rd"); p. pr. & vb. n. {adoring} ([.a]*d[=o]r"[i^]ng).] [OE. aouren, anouren, adoren, OF. aorer, adorer, F. adorer, fr. L. adorare; ad + orare to speak, pray, os, oris, mouth. In OE. confused with honor, the French prefix a- being confused with OE. a, an, on. See {Oral}.] 1. To worship with profound reverence; to pay divine honors to; to honor as a deity or as divine.
Bishops and priests, . . . bearing the host, which he [James II.] publicly adored. --Smollett.
2. To love in the highest degree; to regard with the utmost esteem and affection; to idolize.
The great mass of the population abhorred Popery and adored Monmouth. --Macaulay.
Those who loved "Pee-wee's Big Adventure" will adore this one.
I do not adore the cuckoo-clock that tells us and Carr when his mind is wandering; but, like everything else, its timing is perfect.
Arvin is the kind of company that chambers of commerce adore.
I would adore a portfolio of stocks backed by the Ridley-inspired promise.
I adore the look of the auditorium.'
Burchuladze, a winner in the 1985 Luciano Pavarotti voice competition in Philadelphia, has the deep notes and dark sound Americans expect and adore from Russian basses.
A touch stiff and heavy perhaps, they are nevertheless dexterously cut in pretty styles which merge Thai influences with those of folkish, eastern European national costume. 'I loathe fashion but adore clothes,' she says.
I adore sea urchins - a delicacy unknown in Britain.
Many of them still adore Lady Thatcher and are loyal to Mr Major.