Apedia

Appetite Appetite.  Desire From  Appetite  Appetites  Dictionary Noun

Title appetite
Text
Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary
ap·pe·tite
 \\ˈa-pə-ˌtīt\\ noun
 ETYMOLOGY  Middle English apetit, from Anglo-French, from Latin appetitus, from appetere to strive after, from ad- + petere to go to — more at 
feather
 DATE  14th century
1. any of the instinctive desires necessary to keep up organic life; especially : the desire to eat
2.
  a. an inherent craving
      an insatiable appetite for work
  b. 
taste
preference
      the cultural appetites of the time — J. D. Hart
• ap·pe·ti·tive 
 \\-ˌtī-tiv\\ adjective
English Etymology
appetite
  c.1300, "craving for food," from Anglo-Fr. appetit
O.Fr
http://O.Fr
. apetit, from L. appetitus "appetite," lit. "desire toward," from appetituspp. of appetere "to long for, desire" from ad- "to" + petere "go to, seek out" (see petition).
Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary-牛津双解-OALD7
appetite
ap·pe·tite 5Apitait / noun1. [U, C, usually sing.] physical desire for food
   食欲;胃口:
   He suffered from headaches and loss of appetite.
   他患有头痛和食欲不振。 
   The walk gave me a good appetite. 
   散步使我胃口大开。 
   Don't spoil your appetite by eating between meals.
   不要在两餐之间吃东西,以免影响胃口。 
2. [C] ~ (for sth) a strong desire for sth
   强烈欲望:
   The public have an insatiable appetite for scandal. 
   公众对丑事总是喜闻乐道。 
   sexual appetites 
   性欲 
   The preview was intended to whet your appetite (= make you want more).
   预告是为了吊胃口。 
Oxford Collocations Dictionary for Students of English
Oxford Collocations dictionary for students of English


appetite 
noun 
desire for food 

ADJ. big, enormous, gargantuan, good, healthy, hearty, huge, insatiable, large, ravenous special double-decker sandwiches for big appetites | poor, small The symptoms of depression can include poor appetite and weight loss. I have always had a small appetite. | jaded magnificent meals to tempt the most jaded appetites 

VERB + APPETITE have She had no appetite and began to lose weight. | lose | build up, develop, work up I went for a walk to work up an appetite for breakfast. | get back, regain After a week she had regained her appetite. | give sb All that digging has given me an appetite. | give an edge to, increase The cold air had given an edge to my appetite. | control, curb, suppress (technical)take away, take the edge off Some drugs can suppress the appetite. | ruin, spoil This is something you can eat between meals without ruining your appetite. | satisfy This meal will satisfy even the healthiest appetite. 

APPETITE + VERB grow, increase | come back, return His appetite has returned to normal. 

PHRASES a lack of appetite, a loss of appetite The symptoms include aching limbs and a loss of appetite. 

strong desire for sth 

ADJ. enormous, great, huge, insatiable, voracious an insatiable appetite for books | public The BBC recognizes the public appetite for serious information. | sexual 

VERB + APPETITE have | lose | give sb | increase, revive, whet Reading the first story whetted my appetite for more. | dull | satisfy 

APPETITE + VERB grow, increase 

PREP. ~ for His appetite for power had grown. 

OLT
appetite noun
 appetite1 (Don't spoil your appetite by eating between meals.) appetite2 (an appetite for scandal)
Webster's Third New International Dictionary, Unabridged
ap·pe·tite
\ˈapəˌtīt, usu -īd.+V\ noun
(-s)
Etymology: Middle English appetit, apetit, from Middle French apetit, from Latin appetitus, from appetitus, past participle of appetere to strive after, long for, from ad- + petere to go to, head for — more at 
feather
1. : a natural desire : one of the instinctive desires necessary to keep up organic life; especially : the immediate desire to eat when food is present
2. 
 a. : an inherent or habitual desire or propensity for gratification or satisfaction
  < an appetite for life, a robust reaching out to life — V.S.Pritchett >
  < an insatiable appetite >
  appetite for the acquisition of more territory — A.J.Toynbee >
 b. : 
taste
liking
preference
  < a faculty for idleness implies a catholic appetite — R.L.Stevenson >
  < the cultural appetites of the time — J.D.Hart >
 c. obsolete : 
appetency
 2
3. archaic : an object of desire
 < power being the natural appetite of princes — Jonathan Swift >
Synonyms: see 
desire

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