open-mindedness
/ˌəʊpən ˈmaɪndɪdnəs/ (bre, ipa) · /ˌəʊpən ˈmaɪndɪdnəs/ (ame, ipa)
open-mindedness — 名詞
1. a willingness to listen to new or unfamiliar ideas and to seriously consider opi
開放心態
願意接納新觀念的態度
a willingness to listen to new or unfamiliar ideas and to seriously consider opinions that differ from your own, without rejecting them immediately
Christopher showed real open-mindedness when he agreed to try the team's new scheduling system after hearing their reasons.
Christopher 聽完同事的理由後,同意試用團隊的新排班系統,展現了真正的開放心態。
showed + open-mindedness; when-clause for context
Beatriz's open-mindedness about other cultures made her a wonderful travel companion on the trip to Morocco.
Beatriz 對其他文化的開放心態,讓她成為摩洛哥之旅的絕佳旅伴。
possessive + open-mindedness + about + [topic]
The teacher praised the class for their open-mindedness during the discussion about different family traditions.
老師稱讚全班同學在討論不同家庭傳統時展現的開放心態。
Mauricio's open-mindedness allowed him to change his position after the new evidence was presented to the committee.
Mauricio 的開放心態讓他在委員會看到新證據後,願意改變自己的立場。
Open-mindedness in scientific research means being willing to test ideas that contradict the current understanding of a problem.
科學研究中的開放心態,意味著願意檢驗那些與當前理解相矛盾的觀點。
- openness
broader term — can mean general transparency or frankness, not specifically about accepting new ideas
- receptiveness
focuses more narrowly on willingness to receive new information; slightly more formal
- tolerance
implies enduring or putting up with differences rather than genuinely welcoming them; carries a weaker positive connotation
- broad-mindedness
very close in meaning but slightly less common; emphasises freedom from prejudice
- narrow-mindedness
direct antonym — unwillingness to consider other viewpoints
- bigotry
stronger and more negative — active intolerance of other views or groups
- closed-mindedness
near-synonym of narrow-mindedness; refers to refusal to engage with new ideas
文法句型
[possessive] + open-mindedness + about + [topic]
open-mindedness + toward + [person/group]
用法筆記
Commonly paired with possessive determiners (her open-mindedness, their open-mindedness) or followed by the prepositions 'about' or 'toward' to specify the topic or the people involved. The adjective form 'open-minded' is more frequent in everyday conversation; the noun tends to appear in more reflective or formal contexts.