His eyes hazed when he thought of her. 他想起她来时,眼前一片模糊。
Haze is often caused by heat. 薄雾常因热气而起。
haze
[ noun ]
atmospheric moisture or dust or smoke that causes reduced visibility
<noun.phenomenon>
confusion characterized by lack of clarity
<noun.cognition> [ verb ]
become hazy, dull, or cloudy
<verb.weather>
harass by imposing humiliating or painful tasks, as in military institutions
<verb.social>
Haze \Haze\, v. i. To be hazy, or thick with haze. --Ray.
Haze \Haze\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Hazed} (h[=a]zd); p. pr. & vb. n. {Hazing}.] [Also {hase}.] [Cf. Sw. haza to hamstring, fr. has hough, OD. h[ae]ssen ham.] 1. To harass by exacting unnecessary, disagreeable, or difficult work.
2. To harass or annoy by playing abusive or shameful tricks upon; to humiliate by practical jokes; -- used esp. of college students, as an initiation rite into a fraternity or other group; as, the sophomores hazed a freshman.
Haze \Haze\ (h[=a]z), n. [Cf. Icel. h["o]ss gray; akin to AS. hasu, heasu, gray; or Armor. a['e]zen, ['e]zen, warm vapor, exhalation, zephyr.] 1. Light vapor or smoke in the air which more or less impedes vision, with little or no dampness; a lack of transparency in the air; hence, figuratively, obscurity; dimness.
O'er the sky The silvery haze of summer drawn. --Tennyson.
Above the world's uncertain haze. --Keble.
2. A state of confusion, uncertainty, or vagueness of thought or perception; as, after the explosion, people were wandering around in a haze. [PJC]
Boston still had a thin, transparent layer of haze Monday, said weather service meteorologist Tom Emerson.
The fire was confined to the bottom three floors of the bank building, but enormous amounts of heavy smoke billowed from every floor, casting a haze for blocks over the congested business district.
Dreamy English gardening is all very well in a summer's haze, but many of its greatest nurseries buy the plants for it in the Netherlands and Belgium. You can see why this piece of national double-think will soon have economic consequences.
The shamal, or northwest wind, is a rare occurrence that drives sand at speeds of more than 50 mph and can cause haze as high as 18,000 feet.
From here, on a clear day, you can see the snows of the Zerafshan mountains marching into the desert along a highway of haze. Where you are standing, the temperature is probably close to 40'C, and the traffic fumes catch in your throat.
Yet another fine exhibit from this large company encouraged me to follow up Hucherella Charles Bloom because its darkish leaves are not too sombre and its haze of peach-pink flowers looked exquisite.
Vermont Castings officials, wary of a patchwork of regulations in states concerned about winter haze, helped the EPA devise the new rules, said David Kimbell, the company's vice president for marketing.
In June of next year, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration intends to launch the telescope above the haze of the Earth's atmosphere.
Sunlight likely converts methane into complex hydrocarbons, creating a transparent reddish-orange photochemical haze, Stone said.
He said a more accurate study is needed to pinpoint Navajo's contribution to the haze and determine whether installing expensive scrubbers would make a significant difference.
"You can see a haze of smoke the moment they get off the plane," says Dexter Davis, airport manager at Dulles International Airport near Washington, D.C.
Rough and tumble hills merged into the haze and trees battled the wind.
The trouble is that just when the evening draws to close in a merry haze, you know he's going to turn round and say: 'It's on you.' At the outset both the gilts and the equity market loved the Budget.
A haze comes over the sound and the Brigadoon magic starts to work.
The provisions would require the use of cleaner gasoline in all cars in the nation's nine smoggiest areas, beginning in 1992 and would require the EPA to identify and regulate the source of haze in western national parks within two years.
Terrible that 1.5 million acres of Yellowstone had been burned this summer, and terrible that all that smoke and haze were blanketing much of the nation, charring lungs after scorching the earth.
In the polished windows of confiterias, people may be seen just sitting and gazing, watching the day go by in a haze of idleness and fatigue.
Ringo Starr won a permanent court order Wednesday blocking the release of a 1987 album he says was made in an alcohol haze, then testified that he never agreed to pay the producer's studio costs.
But wait a minute, fellas. According to your book, Denver (No. 2 in the "dirty skies" competition) has a horizon that is "blocked by a dirty brown haze every other day."
Cars had to be led through the haze by a pilot car.
The reward is a blue haze of flowers in May and early June without any effort on my part. Years ago, I used to spread many of these dying forget-me-not plants around apple trees in my orchard, where they performed a similar role.
A federal agency has proposed that $4.4 billion worth of pollution-control equipment be installed at a northern Arizona power plant to cut emissions blamed for wintertime haze at the Grand Canyon.
A haze from the smoke hung over a large part of western South Dakota and was visible from Pierre, 160 miles away.
"There will be kind of a blue haze over everything.
On any given day, around 60,000 20-foot or 40-foot containers are parked on the concrete waterfront while lines of vessels wait their turn in the haze beyond.
The fire started Thursday in a basement air-handling unit and pumped enough smoke up air vents to fill the two-story-tall House chamber with a foul-smelling haze.
Redbone's own Indian name stems from his people's belief that a red haze enshrouds the bones of a true Indian.