brown study
/'braun'stʌdi/
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
Noun: A state of deep, serious, and often somewhat gloomy or absent-minded thought; a reverie or period of intense absorption in one's own thoughts, often to the exclusion of the external world.
Usage
This is a formal, somewhat literary, and now slightly old-fashioned term. It describes a person who is so lost in their own thoughts that they seem unaware of their surroundings. It often implies a pensive, meditative, or brooding quality.
Examples
- She was in a brown study for hours after reading the troubling letter.
- He sat by the window in a brown study, oblivious to the noise of the children playing outside.
- The professor's frequent brown studies were well-known among his students.
Advanced Usage
- The phrase is almost always used with the preposition "in": in a brown study.
- It can sometimes carry a connotation of melancholy or troubled thought, not just neutral concentration.
Variants and Related Words
- Study (noun): In its archaic sense, "study" could mean a state of contemplation or reverie, which is the sense preserved in this idiom. The word "brown" here is thought to suggest gloominess or seriousness.
Synonyms
- Reverie
- Daydream
- Abstraction
- Preoccupation
- Pensiveness
Related Idioms
- To be lost in thought: A more common, modern phrase with a similar meaning.
- To be in a trance: Suggests a more profound detachment from reality.
- To be miles away: An informal idiom indicating that someone is not paying attention because they are thinking deeply about something else.
Noun
- a state of deep absorption or thoughtfulness