heart

heart — noun

1. the organ inside your chest that pumps blood through your body, keeping you aliv

1.名詞A2
釋義

the organ inside your chest that pumps blood through your body, keeping you alive.

例句

Tanvi's heart was beating fast after she ran up the stairs.

collocation: heart beats fast / heart pounds

The doctor listened to Christopher's heart with a stethoscope.

collocation: listen to someone's heart

用法筆記

Often used with verbs describing physical sensation: 'beat', 'pound', 'race', 'thump'. Can also describe heart-related medical conditions like 'heart attack' or 'heart disease'.

常見錯誤

My hurt beats fast.
My heart beats fast.
💡'heart' and 'hurt' sound similar but are spelled differently.
I have a pain in my heart' (for chest pain unrelated to the organ).
I have chest pain.
💡'heart' refers specifically to the organ; chest pain can have many causes.

2. a person's emotional nature, especially the capacity for love, kindness, or symp

2.名詞B1
釋義

a person's emotional nature, especially the capacity for love, kindness, or sympathy — for example, having a warm heart means you care about other people.

例句

Eli has a kind heart and always helps neighbours carry their groceries.

collocation: kind heart / good heart

The old teacher touched the hearts of everyone who knew her.

collocation: touch someone's heart

同義詞
  • soul

    more spiritual, refers to the immaterial essence of a person rather than just emotion

  • nature

    broader term covering temperament and behaviour, not just emotions

  • compassion

    focuses specifically on sympathy for others' suffering

反義詞
  • cruelty

    indifference or pleasure in others' pain, opposite of kindness of heart

  • coldness

    absence of warm feeling or affection

用法筆記

Frequently found in fixed phrases like 'at heart', 'in one's heart of hearts', 'from the bottom of one's heart'. Often contrasted with 'head' (logic/reason vs emotion).

常見錯誤

I love you with all my heart.' (not a mistake, but overused by learners).
I truly care about you.
💡sometimes simpler phrasing is more natural.
She has a warm heart for animals.
She has a soft spot for animals.
💡'warm heart' describes general kindness; 'soft spot' is for a specific object of affection.

3. the most central or essential part of a place, system, problem, or idea.

3.名詞B1
釋義

the most central or essential part of a place, system, problem, or idea.

例句

The old market is at the very heart of the city.

preposition: at the heart of

Trust is the heart of any strong friendship.

同義詞
  • core

    more emphatic, suggests the most fundamental part

  • centre

    neutral term for the middle point of something, less metaphorical

  • essence

    abstract, refers to the defining quality of something

反義詞
  • surface

    the outer or most accessible part, opposite of the essential core

  • periphery

    the outer edge or boundary, opposite of the central part

用法筆記

Almost always followed by 'of' + noun phrase. Common in both spatial contexts ('heart of the forest') and abstract contexts ('heart of the matter'). Not used for the literal centre of a geometric shape.

常見錯誤

The heart of the square table is 30 centimetres from each edge.
The centre of the table is...
💡'heart' is not used for geometric centres.

4. the firm inner section of leafy vegetables like cabbage, lettuce, or artichoke,

4.名詞B2
釋義

the firm inner section of leafy vegetables like cabbage, lettuce, or artichoke, where the leaves are packed tightly together.

例句

Cut the cabbage in half and remove the hard white heart before slicing.

collocation: remove/cut out the heart

The heart of a romaine lettuce is tender and slightly sweet.

同義詞
  • core

    more general term; 'core' is used for fruits while 'heart' is for leafy vegetables

用法筆記

Distinct from 'core' (used for fruits like apples). 'Heart' specifically refers to the inner leaves or bud of leafy vegetables. Hearts of palm are a separate culinary ingredient from a different plant part.

常見錯誤

I ate the heart of the apple.
I ate the core of the apple.
💡'heart' refers to vegetables, not fruits.

5. courage, determination, or emotional strength, especially when you continue desp

5.名詞B2
釋義

courage, determination, or emotional strength, especially when you continue despite fear or difficulty.

例句

The team lost the game but they played with a lot of heart.

collocation: play with heart / fight with heart

It took a lot of heart for Tendai to speak in front of that crowd.

collocation: take a lot of heart (to do something)

同義詞
  • courage

    more direct and common; 'heart' adds emotional warmth that 'courage' lacks

  • determination

    focuses on persistence rather than emotional strength

  • spirit

    overlaps with heart but also suggests enthusiasm and energy

反義詞
  • cowardice

    lack of courage, opposite of having heart in the face of difficulty

用法筆記

Not used simply to mean 'bravery' in everyday speech. Typically appears in set phrases: 'take heart', 'lose heart', 'have the heart to (do something)'. Often in sports contexts describing effort beyond skill.

常見錯誤

He showed heart when he saved the child from the fire.' (acceptable but unusual).
He showed courage when he saved the child from the fire.
💡'courage' is more natural for brave actions in danger.

6. a design with two rounded lobes on top coming together at a pointed tip below, w

6.名詞A2
釋義

a design with two rounded lobes on top coming together at a pointed tip below, widely recognised as standing for romantic attachment or fondness.

例句

Élise drew a small red heart on the card for her mother.

collocation: draw a heart

The chocolate box was decorated with pink hearts all over it.

用法筆記

Very common in Valentine's Day decorations, emoji (❤️), and jewellery. The symbol is distinct from the anatomical heart shape.

7. in a standard deck of playing cards, the suit identified by red heart symbols, t

7.名詞B1
釋義

in a standard deck of playing cards, the suit identified by red heart symbols, typically ranking above clubs and diamonds in many games.

例句

Jiwoo played the queen of hearts and won the trick.

phrase: [rank] of hearts

In the card game, hearts is considered the highest suit.

用法筆記

Always lowercase unless beginning a sentence. The suit name can be used as uncountable ('hearts is trumps') or plural ('I have four hearts'). Often capitalised on scoreboards and in card-game rules.

8. a playing card belonging to the hearts suit, bearing red heart symbols printed o

8.名詞B1
釋義

a playing card belonging to the hearts suit, bearing red heart symbols printed on its face.

例句

Tanvi had only two cards left in her hand — a seven and a heart.

A heart is the card you need to complete the winning hand.

用法筆記

This sense overlaps with sense 7 but refers to the physical card itself rather than the abstract suit. A 'heart' (sense 8) is a card from the 'hearts' suit (sense 7).

heart — verb