mood
n. 情緒; 語氣; 氣氛; 壞脾氣
Your mood is the way you are feeling at a particular time. If you are in a good mood, you feel cheerful. If you are in a bad mood, you feel angry and impatient.
He is clearly in a good mood today...
明擺著,他今天心情不錯。
When he came back, he was in a foul mood...
他回來時,心情糟透了。
If someone is in a mood, the way they are behaving shows that they are feeling angry and impatient.
She was obviously in a mood.
她顯然情緒不佳。
The mood of a group of people is the way that they think and feel about an idea, event, or question at a particular time.
The government seemed to be in tune with the popular mood...
政府似乎和民眾的意願是一致的。
They largely misread the mood of the electorate.
他們很大程度上誤讀了選民的意圖。
The mood of a place is the general impression that you get of it.
First set the mood with music...
首先用音樂烘托氣氛。
I wanted different moods in each room.
我想讓每個房間都感覺不一樣。
In grammar, the mood of a clause is the way in which the verb forms are used to show whether the clause is, for example, a statement, a question, or an instruction.
1. a characteristic (habitual or relatively temporary) state of feeling;
2. the prevailing psychological state;
3. verb inflections that express how the action or state is conceived by the speaker
in the (或 in no) mood for/to do something
(不)想做某事,(沒)有心情做某事
He's in a prickly mood.
此刻他的心情容易動怒.
She was in a bad mood yesterday.
她昨天不爽.
I am in no mood for joking.
我沒閒心開玩笑.
The mood of the meeting was against him.
大會的氣氛是反對他的.
Her mood threw a dinge even over her students.
她的憂鬱甚至弄得她的學生都情緒低沉.