doom

noun
🔊/duːm/
🔊/duːm/
[uncountable]Idioms
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  1. death or destruction; any terrible event that you cannot avoid死亡;毁灭;厄运;劫数
    • to meet your doom死亡
    • She had a sense of impending doom (= felt that something very bad was going to happen).她预感到厄运已经逼近。🔊🔊
    Extra Examples
    • Fuel shortages spelled the doom of such huge gas-guzzling cars.燃油短缺宣告了这类耗油量大的大型轿车的末日。
    • He sealed his own doom by having an affair with another woman.他与另一个女人有染,毁了自己。
    • The ordinary soldiers went to meet their doom with great bravery.普通士兵英勇赴死。
    Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective
    • impending
    • certain
    verb + doom
    • spell
    phrases
    • doom and gloom
    • a feeling of doom
    • a sense of doom
    See full entry
    Word OriginOld English dōm ‘statute, judgement’, of Germanic origin, from a base meaning ‘to put in place’; related to do1.
Idioms
doom and gloom | gloom and doom
  1. a general feeling of having lost all hope, and of pessimism悲观失望;无望;前景暗淡 (= expecting things to go badly)
    • Despite the obvious setbacks, it is not all doom and gloom for the England team.尽管明显受挫,但对英格兰队来说绝非胜利无望。🔊🔊
    • It's not all doom and gloom and there is lots to look forward to.前景并非一片惨淡,仍然还有很多期待。
prophet of doom | doom merchant
  1. a person who predicts that things will go very badly末日预言者
    • The prophets of doom who said television would kill off the book were wrong.认为电视会扼杀书籍的悲观预言家完全错了。🔊🔊

doom

verb
🔊/duːm/
🔊/duːm/
[usually passive]
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they doom
🔊/duːm/
🔊/duːm/
he / she / it dooms
🔊/duːmz/
🔊/duːmz/
past simple doomed
🔊/duːmd/
🔊/duːmd/
past participle doomed
🔊/duːmd/
🔊/duːmd/
-ing form dooming
🔊/ˈduːmɪŋ/
🔊/ˈduːmɪŋ/
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  1. to make somebody/something certain to fail, suffer, die, etc.使…注定失败(或遭殃、死亡等)
    • be doomed to something The plan was doomed to failure.这个计划注定要失败。🔊🔊
    • be doomed to do something The plan was doomed to fail.该计划注定要失败。
    • be doomed The marriage was doomed from the start.这桩婚姻从一开始就注定要破裂。🔊🔊
    Topics Difficulty and failurec1
    Word OriginOld English dōm ‘statute, judgement’, of Germanic origin, from a base meaning ‘to put in place’; related to do1.