2008年12月30日 星期二
Grudge
grudge
Y
vt. (及物動詞 transitive verb)
1. 怨恨;妒忌[O1]
I don't grudge her success.
我並不妒嫉她的成功。
2. 勉強地給;勉強地准許;不情願做[v-ing][+to-v][O1]
At a time like this, I don't grudge a thing.
在這樣的時候,我什麼都捨得。
n. (名詞 noun)
1. 怨恨;嫌隙;妒忌[C][(+against)]
I don't hold any grudge against you.
我對你毫無忌恨。
精靈教母黛芬賽莉格說 women grudge
D
–noun
1. a feeling of ill will
or
resentment: to [hold] a grudge against a former opponent.
–adjective
2. done, arranged, etc., in order to settle a grudge: The middleweight fight was said to be a grudge match.
–verb (used with object)
3. to give or permit with reluctance; submit to unwillingly: The other team grudged us every point we scored.
4. to resent the good fortune of (another); begrudge.
–verb (used without object)
5. Obsolete. to feel dissatisfaction or ill will.
Tibbs reveals himself to be a Philadelphia police detective; after he and Gillespie come to a grudging understanding of one another, Tibbs offers to help in Gillespie's investigation. As the case progresses, both Gillespie and Tibbs betray a tendency to jump to culture-dictated conclusions. Still, the case is solved thanks to the informal teamwork of the two law officers.
[d]etest
vehement, besides a sense of [d]isdain
To detes[t a] combination of ignorance and arrogance.
ab[hor]
a deep-rooted [hor]ror or sense of repugnance
[Nature] abhors [a] vacuum.
abominate
express repulsion toward something thought of as unworthy, unlucky
To abominate [treachery].
Detest
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