(verb.) make numb or insensitive; 'The shock numbed her senses'.
(adj.) so frightened as to be unable to move; stunned or paralyzed with terror; petrified; 'too numb with fear to move' .
录入:特伦特
双语例句
Her head felt dazed and numb. 戴维·赫伯特·劳伦斯.恋爱中的女人.
Nearly all were weeping but some were numb with what they had seen and the tears had dried in them. 欧内斯特·海明威.丧钟为谁而鸣.
He was coughing from the TNT fumes and he felt numb all through himself. 欧内斯特·海明威.丧钟为谁而鸣.
When he came to the low church wall, he got over it, like a man whose legs were numbed and stiff, and then turned round to look for me. 查尔斯·狄更斯.远大前程.
I'd far better be a walking than a getting numbed and dreary. 查尔斯·狄更斯.我们共同的朋友.
Oh, it is no trouble; I dare say your own hands are almost numbed with cold. 夏洛蒂·勃朗特.简·爱.
It ain't that you've been a-struggling, mother, but you've been stiff and numbed. 查尔斯·狄更斯.我们共同的朋友.
Hitherto I had been acting, and action had numbed thought. 阿瑟·柯南·道尔.福尔摩斯回忆录.
His hands,' taking up one of them, which dropped like a leaden weight, 'get numbed. 查尔斯·狄更斯.我们共同的朋友.
The pang passed, and nothing but the dull numbing pain of it remained. 威尔基·柯林斯.白衣女人.
I hadn't any particular work to give him, but I had a number of small induction coils, and to give him something to do I told him to fix them up and sell them among his sailor friends. 弗兰克·刘易斯·戴尔.爱迪生的生平和发明.
In May, 1915, they sank the great passenger liner, the _Lusitania_, without any warning, drowning a number of American citizens. 赫伯特·乔治·威尔斯.世界史纲.
He took a neat little leather case out of a drawer, and opening it he exhibited a number of shining instruments. 阿瑟·柯南·道尔.福尔摩斯归来记.
I started in to make a number of these lamps, but I soon found that the X-ray had affected poisonously my assistant, Mr. Dally, so that his hair came out and his flesh commenced to ulcerate. 弗兰克·刘易斯·戴尔.爱迪生的生平和发明.
The figures are the number of typhoid deaths occurring yearly out of 100,000 inhabitants. 伯莎M.克拉克.科学通论.