外部链接:    leo英德   dict有道 百度搜索百度 google谷歌 google图片 wiki维基 百度百科百科   

 ire [aiә]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 忿怒

[电] 美国无线电工程师学会




    ire
    [ noun ]
    1. a strong emotion; a feeling that is oriented toward some real or supposed grievance

    2. <noun.feeling>
    3. belligerence aroused by a real or supposed wrong (personified as one of the deadly sins)

    4. <noun.act>


    Ire \Ire\, n. [F., fr. L. ira.]
    Anger; wrath. [Poet.]

    Syn: Anger; passion; rage; fury. See {Anger}.

    1. It is a composition of wit, brilliance and energy; Sinopoli risked the ire of the large Sunday-night audience in programming it.
    2. Mr. Stanley's efforts made him popular within the Reagan administration, particularly among "privatization buffs," but drew the ire of state and local officials.
    3. Japan has to show some give in order to ease congressional ire.
    4. He drew the ire of some black groups the same year when he called black crime against blacks "our little dirty secret." Ward's term expires in 1991.
    5. Many of the government policies and proposals that have attracted the public's ire have come in response to demands leveled by Washington.
    6. The fact that the mini-post offices were staffed by Sears employees had drawn the ire of the union.
    7. Bush's ire may have been sparked by footage shown on television networks of some lighthearted remarks the president made on the golf course Friday.
    8. He also roused the ire of his supervisors by saying his favorite parts of the job were payday and quitting time.
    9. "He's the one we hate the most." Mr. Allen is used to the ire directed at him.
    10. A House-Senate conference ratified a budget resolution that would raise taxes and limit military-spending growth in ways that have raised the ire of President Reagan.
    11. If the directors refuse to reconsider the offer, they risk catching the ire of their shareholders, Mr. Joedicke said; if they do reconsider, they risk angering the company's largest union, the International Association of Machinists.
    12. East Germany is the latest to join the chorus of East European critics of the reform-minded Hungarians, its ire raised by Budapest's decision to open a westward escape route for thousands of East Germans.
    13. Well, he just turned right around and high-tailed it back to the house." The city council originally wanted to move Thor out last fall, but Crosby said he wasn't willing to wake him from his hibernation for fear of raising the snoozing bruin's ire.
    14. Mr Clinton himself, to the ire of many veterans, evaded military service in Vietnam. The US embarked three years ago on a slow journey towards normal relations with Vietnam.
    15. This time it is the Customs Service that earns our ire.
    16. At the convention of the National Association of Recording Merchandisers, which ends today, it is clear that the ire of the retailers is rising and that this is just one issue increasing tension between retailers and record companies.
    17. Sellers have promoted single-premium policies as one of the few tax shelters remaining after the 1986 tax overhaul, sparking congressional ire.
    18. While this is not available as cash, it pays interest of SLRs250 a month and can be pledged to a bank as collateral for a loan. In 1989, its first year of operation, the programme attracted the ire of the World Bank.
    19. Faced with such ire, the Kremlin unceremoniously backed down.
    20. Fannie Mae's request drew the ire of other secondary market participants, who said its entry could threaten their profits and would be an unwarranted expansion of a federally sponsored corporation and unfair competition for the private sector.
    21. The administration's position on minority scholarships has aroused ire and confusion among colleges and universities, which contend that special scholarship pools are critical to ensure that minority students have access to higher education.
    22. Country singer Willie Nelson's support of an American Indian convicted of killing two FBI agents has drawn the ire of police, who are threatening to picket his concerts next weekend.
    23. Both these issues have shown that there are few better ways that the government can stir public ire than by interfering with the energy industry.
    24. But 100 reviews on 357 pages of Brian Sewell's unadulterated ire and froth is far too rich, I suspect, for most of us to digest in one read.
    25. A draft of the U.S. proposal was briefly circulated Wednesday morning, but then quickly withdrawn when it raised the ire of many of the delegates.
    26. Sullivan had aroused their ire when he indicated a pro-choice view in an interview.
    27. A brooding figure in a black hat and long coat, he immediately arouses Seth's suspicion and ire.
    28. Rollins' memo to House Republicans saying it was OK to distance themselves from the president on tax issues raised the president's ire.
    29. But the Soviets themselves are also targets of U.S. ire.
    30. It also drew the ire of the chairman of the House Government Operations subcommittee on environment, energy and natural resources, who berated an Army brigadier general for his response to the investigators' findings.
    加入收藏 本地收藏 百度搜藏 QQ书签 美味书签 Google书签 Mister Wong
    您正在访问的是
    中国词汇量第二的英语词典
    更多精彩,登录后发现......
    验证码看不清,请点击刷新
      注册