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 cheer [tʃiә]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 愉快, 振奋, 欢呼

vi. 欢呼, 喝彩, 快活起来

vt. 使振奋, 欢呼


  1. He's always full of cheer in summer.
    夏天他总是高高兴兴的。
  2. He cheered up at the thought of seeing her again.
    想到再次见到她,他就高兴起来。
  3. They cheered loudly for their football team.
    他们大声地为自己的足球队喊加油。


cheer


Cheer \Cheer\ (ch[=e]r), n. [OE. chere face, welcome, cheer, OF.
chiere, F. ch[`e]re, fr. LL. cara face, Gr. ka`ra head; akin
to Skr. [,c]iras, L. cerebrum brain, G. hirn, and E.
cranium.]
1. The face; the countenance or its expression. [Obs.]
``Sweat of thy cheer.'' --Wyclif.

2. Feeling; spirit; state of mind or heart.

Be of good cheer. --Matt. ix. 2.

The parents . . . fled away with heavy cheer.
--Holland.

3. Gayety; mirth; cheerfulness; animation.

I have not that alacrity of spirit,
Nor cheer of mind, that I was wont to have. --Shak.

1. That which promotes good spirits or cheerfulness;
provisions prepared for a feast; entertainment; as, a
table loaded with good cheer.

5. A shout, hurrah, or acclamation, expressing joy
enthusiasm, applause, favor, etc.

Welcome her, thundering cheer of the street.
--Tennyson.

{What cheer?} How do you fare? What is there that is
cheering?


Cheer \Cheer\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Cheered} (ch[=e]rd); p. pr.
& vb. n. {cheering}.]
1. To cause to rejoice; to gladden; to make cheerful; --
often with up. --Cowpe.

2. To infuse life, courage, animation, or hope, into; to
inspirit; to solace or comfort.

The proud he tamed, the penitent he cheered.
--Dryden.

3. To salute or applaud with cheers; to urge on by cheers;
as, to cheer hounds in a chase.

{To cheer ship}, to salute a passing ship by cheers of
sailors stationed in the rigging.

Syn: To gladden; encourage; inspirit; comfort; console;
enliven; refresh; exhilarate; animate; applaud.


Cheer \Cheer\, v. i.
1. To grow cheerful; to become gladsome or joyous; -- usually
with up.

At sight of thee my gloomy soul cheers up. --A.
Philips.

2. To be in any state or temper of mind. [Obs.]

How cheer'st thou, Jessica? --Shak.

3. To utter a shout or shouts of applause, triumph, etc.

And even the ranks of Tusculum
Could scare forbear to cheer. --Macaulay.

  1. A cheer rattled the rafters of Town Hall after the school committee voted unanimously Monday night to reinstate Norman Najimy.
  2. Turnover was a hefty 9.9m. In spite of the dividend disappointment, retail analysts still found plenty to cheer in the results and a raft of profits upgrades followed.
  3. There was yet more cheer from Wall Street securities houses, with Salomon and Morgan Stanley proudly displaying handsome increases in first quarter income. The nation's big oil producers also shone.
  4. More than 500,000 Germans gathered along the Berlin Wall to cheer the arrival of 1990.
  5. Bid target Northern appreciated 4 to 1010p, and its bidder Trafalgar House edged a penny forward to 75p, in good business of 7.2m Optimism over trading during the festive season brought a cheer to several retailing stocks.
  6. Shaken by the boos of the crowd whenever the Japanese wrestlers enter the arena, one Japanese laughs nervously and says, "I'm glad we didn't have to cheer our man against the Korean.
  7. Some retailers still see reason for cheer.
  8. Barbara Bush has written to English schoolchildren about her dyslexic son, Neil, to cheer on their efforts to overcome the learning disability.
  9. "It didn't give me anything to really cheer about," he says.
  10. Separately, the Commerce Department said housing starts jumped 5.5% in January on a surge in apartment construction. Housing economists found surprisingly little in the report to cheer them, however.
  11. Citizens flock to airports in the middle of the night simply to cheer transports of returning servicemen and women.
  12. Half a cheer for the new Ring at Bayreuth.
  13. Investors interested only in profits, however, may have reason to cheer the arrival of more fallen angels.
  14. The First Fidelity-Fidelcor merger isn't likely to cheer the New York money-center banks.
  15. Indolent passengers with big appetites. So as the executions roll on, it is time to ease the top off a hive, shake a honeycomb free of bees and head for the dining table with a grateful cheer of 'up the workers'.
  16. Can it be that what is bare-faced propaganda to one side is no more than cheer and encouragement to the other in difficult times?
  17. Tens of thousands of people, many wearing black armbands, rallied to cheer escaped leaders of China's pro-democracy student movement Tuesday, the 100th day since its suppression.
  18. Sir Peter Walters, Midland's new chairman, had only limited cheer to offer shareholders when he announced a pretax first half 1991 loss of #71 million ($118.9 million), reflecting heavy bad-debt charges.
  19. Foreign bankers cheer Koor's recovery, but warn that their patience is growing thin.
  20. But that ignores the impact of parliamentary performances on the morale of their respective supporters; and sooner or later perceptions at Westminster tend to percolate into the public consciousness. There are other reasons for Labour cheer.
  21. Africa needed something to cheer about after the world recession of the 1970s and its own debt crisis in the 1980s.
  22. After walking through the staff cabin trying to cheer people up, he retired to his own cabin and ordered a noontime martini, unusually early in the day for him, just as Gerald Ford was taking the oath in Washington.
  23. The squad was formed in February to fight the battle of shrinkage, which they defined in a cheer as "anything not accounted for." Walton asked for a microphone so the crowd could hear them.
  24. They took the opening coolly, but began to cheer as soon as Polly got into her singing stride.
  25. From what I have heard through the "boat people" who resettled in the U.S., the situation in Vietnam is not something to cheer about.
  26. Thousands of Zaireans chanting, singing and waving branches poured into downtown Kinshasa, the capital, and blocked the streets to cheer the president's decision.
  27. Government weather forecasters offered scant cheer to drought-plagued areas Wednesday, issuing a series of forecasts that call for more of the same, at least for the next month.
  28. Hundreds of spectators gathered to cheer Tsukudajima fishermen as they heaved a gilded shrine onto a barge in Sumida River as part of a summer festival held every three years since the mid-1600s.
  29. He should pop into one during the next few weeks and cheer himself up.
  30. At Griffith Stadium, the old ballpark, blacks could cheer the Washington Senators but, until baseball broke the color line after World War II, no black could play for the Senators or any other major league team.
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