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DICT.TW English-Chinese Dictionary 英漢字典
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Easton's 1897 Bible Dictionary
Hitchcock's Bible Names Dictionary (late 1800's)
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7 definitions found
From:
DICT.TW English-Chinese Dictionary 英漢字典
trance
/ˈtræn(t)s/
夢幻之境,恍惚,著迷(
vt
.)使恍惚,使發獃
From:
DICT.TW English-Chinese Medical Dictionary 英漢醫學字典
trance
/ˈtræn(t)s/
名詞
迷睡,(神志)恍惚,迷睡性木殭
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Trance
,
v. t.
[
imp. &
p
. p.
Tranced
p.
pr
. &
vb
. n.
Trancing
]
1.
To
entrance
.
And
three
I
left
him
tranced
.
--
Shak
.
2.
To
pass
over
or
across
;
to
traverse
. [
Poetic
]
Trance
the
world
over
.
--
Beau
. &
Fl
.
When
thickest
dark
did
trance
the
sky
.
--
Tennyson
.
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Trance
v. i.
To
pass
;
to
travel
. [
Obs
.]
◄
►
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Trance
n.
1.
A
tedious
journey
. [
Prov
.
Eng
.]
2.
A
state
in
which
the
soul
seems
to
have
passed
out
of
the
body
into
another
state
of
being
,
or
to
be
rapt
into
visions
;
an
ecstasy
.
And
he
became
very
hungry
,
and
would
have
eaten
;
but
while
they
made
ready
,
he
fell
into
a
trance
.
--
Acts
.
x
. 10.
My
soul
was
ravished
quite
as
in
a
trance
.
--
Spenser
.
3.
Med.
A
condition
,
often
simulating
death
,
in
which
there
is
a
total
suspension
of
the
power
of
voluntary
movement
,
with
abolition
of
all
evidences
of
mental
activity
and
the
reduction
to
a
minimum
of
all
the
vital
functions
so
that
the
patient
lies
still
and
apparently
unconscious
of
surrounding
objects
,
while
the
pulsation
of
the
heart
and
the
breathing
,
although
still
present
,
are
almost
or
altogether
imperceptible
.
He
fell
down
in
a
trance
.
--
Chaucer
.
From:
WordNet (r) 2.0
trance
n
1:
a
psychological
state
induced
by
(
or
as
if
induced
by
)
a
magical
incantation
[
syn
:
enchantment
,
spell
]
2:
a
state
of
mind
in
which
consciousness
is
fragile
and
voluntary
action
is
poor
or
missing
;
a
state
resembling
deep
sleep
v
:
attract
;
cause
to
be
enamored
; "
She
captured
all
the
men's
hearts
" [
syn
:
capture
,
enamour
,
catch
,
becharm
,
enamor
,
captivate
,
beguile
,
charm
,
fascinate
,
bewitch
,
entrance
,
enchant
]
From:
Easton's 1897 Bible Dictionary
Trance
(
Gr
.
ekstasis
,
from
which
the
word
"
ecstasy
"
is
derived
)
denotes
the
state
of
one
who
is
"
out
of
himself
."
Such
were
the
trances
of
Peter
and
Paul
,
Acts
10:10; 11:5; 22:17,
ecstasies
, "
a
preternatural
,
absorbed
state
of
mind
preparing
for
the
reception
of
the
vision
", (
comp
. 2
Cor
. 12:1-4).
In
Mark
5:42
and
Luke
5:26
the
Greek
word
is
rendered
"
astonishment
,"
"
amazement
" (
comp
.
Mark
16:8;
Acts
3:10).
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