grudge
v[Tn, Tg, Tsg, Dn.n, Dn.pr]
~ sth (to sb) feel resentful about sth; do or give sth very unwillingly 怨恨某事物; 勉强做某事或给某物
He grudges every penny he has to spend. 他每花一便士都非常吝惜.
I grudge paying so much for such inferior goods. 我不愿花这麽多钱买次品.
He grudges her earning more than he does. 他嫉妒她挣的比他多.
I don't grudge him his success, ie I admit he deserves it. 我认为他成功是理所当然的.
She would grudge a penny even to the poorest beggar, ie She is very mean. 她连给最穷的乞丐一个便士都舍不得. grudge, n ~ (against sb) feeling of ill-willgruel, envy, resentment, spite, etc 恶意; 嫉妒; 怨恨; 遗憾
I bear him no grudge. 我对他没有怨恨.
He has a grudge against me. 他对我有恶意.
He has been harbouring/nursing a grudge against me. 他一直对我心怀嫉妒.
[attrib 作定语]
a grudge fight, ie when one boxer, etc has a grudge against the other 彼此结怨的拳手互斗.
🔁 扩展释义
*[grʌdʒ]n. 怨恨, 恶意vt. 怀恨, 嫉妒, 吝惜相关词组: have a grudge against sb
That sounds like a good idea. I have a few friends I could ring to see if they're free.
听起来是个好主意。我可以打电话给我的几个朋友看看他们是否有空。
Their feet were fixed to one bar and their hands to another bar.
他们的脚拴在一根铁杠上,他们的手拴在另外一根铁杆上。
It soon became clear that the straight part of the dance changed when the sun's position changed. If the feeding place was toward the sun, the dancer headed straight upward during the straight part of the wagging dance.