فارسی
شبکه مترجمین ایران
واژگان شبکه مترجمین ایران
واژگان شبکه مترجمین ایران
شبکه مترجمین ایران
شبکه مترجمین ایران
شبکه مترجمین ایران
شبکه مترجمین ایران
شبکه مترجمین ایران
شبکه مترجمین ایران
english
1
general::
noun mental feeling: The attitude of the students is good.
Simple Definitions
2
general::
noun ADJ. conciliatory, favourable, friendly, positive, responsible, right, sympathetic She seems to have the right attitude for the job. | aggressive, bad, belligerent, cavalier, critical, hostile, irreverent, negative, patronizing, wrong | carefree, casual, flexible, laid-back, liberal, relaxed The teachers seem to have a very relaxed attitude towards discipline. | conservative, inflexible, rigid, uncompromising | ambivalent | general, prevailing, public The general attitude of the public is sympathetic. | changing | mental, moral, sexual VERB + ATTITUDE adopt, have, take The government has taken a positive attitude to this problem. | change The experience changed his attitude to religion. ATTITUDE + VERB exist, persist, prevail This sort of attitude exists among certain groups of people. | change ATTITUDE + NOUN problem At school he was thought to have an attitude problem. PREP. ~ about changing attitudes about death | ~ of an attitude of confidence and trust Youth is simply an attitude of mind. | ~ to/towards There has been a marked change in attitude towards the European single currency. PHRASES a change in/of attitude, with attitude (informal) (= having a confident, aggressive attitude that challenges what people think) a rock band with attitude
Oxford Collocations Dictionary
3
general::
attitude adjectives good/bad • a lazy student with a bad attitude positive/negative • A positive attitude is essential if you want to be successful. • Many teenagers have a very negative attitude towards cooking. relaxed • On Bali, there is a healthier, more relaxed attitude to life. favourable (= having a good opinion of something or someone ) • Older people tend to have a favourable attitude to the police. critical (= showing you disagree with or disapprove of someone or something ) • People’s attitude towards US foreign policy has become increasingly critical. ambivalent (= not sure if you approve of something ) • The public have a rather ambivalent attitude towards science. cavalier (= very careless, especially about something serious or important ) • his cavalier attitude to the truth patronizing/condescending (= showing that you think you are more important or intelligent than someone ) • complaints about patronising attitudes towards women aggressive/hostile (= showing anger ) • Their attitude suddenly became more aggressive. public attitudes/people’s attitudes • Public attitudes have changed. political attitudes • a survey of people’s political attitudes mental attitude • There is a strong connection between health and mental attitude. sb’s whole attitude • His whole attitude seemed different. the general attitude • His general attitude to our situation was unsympathetic. verbs have/take/adopt an attitude • Not everyone takes a positive attitude towards modern art. sb’s attitude changes • As you get older, your attitude changes. an attitude exists • This attitude no longer exists in the church. sb’s attitude hardens (= they feel less sympathy and they want to be stricter or firmer ) • People’s attitudes towards sex offenders have hardened. phrases an attitude of mind British English (= a way of thinking ) • Being young is simply an attitude of mind. somebody has an attitude problem (= someone is not helpful or pleasant to be with ) • Some of the male students have a real attitude problem.
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