inertia

IPA/ɪˈnɜːʃə/
KK[ˌɪnˈɚʃə]IPA/ɪˈnɜːrʃə/

inertia — noun

1. a general unwillingness or inability to change a situation or start doing someth

1.名詞B2
釋義

a general unwillingness or inability to change a situation or start doing something new, because it feels easier to remain in the same state.

例句

Kian remained in a state of inertia, sending the same résumé year after year.

collocation: state of inertia

The company's strong inertia stopped it from adopting digital tools for over a decade.

同義詞
  • laziness

    more personal and morally loaded; implies someone chooses not to work

  • lethargy

    physical or medical tiredness rather than a mental reluctance to change

  • apathy

    emotional lack of interest or concern, not just a resistance to action

  • stagnation

    often used for economies or organisations that fail to grow over time

反義詞
  • motivation

    the internal drive to take action or make a change

  • momentum

    the energy or force that keeps progress going once it has started

用法筆記

Commonly modified by adjectives naming the source of the inactivity: 'bureaucratic inertia', 'political inertia', 'organisational inertia'. Always uncountable in this sense.

常見錯誤

My inertia made me skip breakfast this morning.
My usual inertia kept me from changing my morning routine.
💡'inertia' describes a long-term tendency or state, not a single lazy choice.

2. the principle of physics according to which an object that is stationary tends t

2.名詞B2
釋義

the principle of physics according to which an object that is stationary tends to stay still, and an object that is moving tends to keep going along a straight line, until another force acts on it.

例句

When the taxi stopped suddenly, the passengers' inertia kept them sliding forward in their seats.

pattern: possessive + inertia

A model rocket needs enough thrust to overcome its own inertia and lift off.

用法筆記

Strictly a physics term, though it appears in everyday explanations of motion (seat belts, vehicle crashes, sports). Uncountable. Frequently appears in the pattern 'the inertia of [noun phrase]', for example 'the inertia of the vehicle'.