|
|
|
gold digger n. A gold-digger is a person who has a relationship with someone who is rich in order to get money or expensive things from them. 指为了钱或者贵重物品和富人交往的人 She may very well prove to be on the up and up, but it pays to be careful. This burg is full of gold diggers, you know. |
|
cherish v. 1.If you cherish something such as a hope or a pleasant memory, you keep it in your mind for a long period of time. cherish希望或者美好的回忆指长久的记住它们 The president will cherish the memory of this visit to Ohio... = treasure 2.If you cherish someone or something, you take good care of them because you love them. cherish人或物表示因为你喜爱它们而很好的照顾它们 The previous owners had cherished the house. 3. If you cherish a right, a privilege, or a principle, you regard it as important and try hard to keep it. cherish权利 原则表示你认为它很重要并且努力保持它 These people cherish their independence and sovereignty. |
|
monotonous adj. 1. Something that is monotonous is very boring because it has a regular, repeated pattern which never changes. 形容某物因为持续性重复出现而无趣 It's monotonous work, like most factory jobs... |
|
disguise n. 1. If you are in disguise, you are not wearing your usual clothes or you have altered your appearance in other ways, so that people will not recognize you. in disguise指穿着平时不常穿的衣服,或者改换面貌,让别人无法认出 You'll have to travel in disguise... v. 2. If you disguise yourself, you put on clothes which make you look like someone else or alter your appearance in other ways, so that people will not recognize you. disguise oneself指把自己打扮的和平时不一样或者像别人的样子,让别人辨识不出 She disguised herself as a man so she could fight on the battlefield. 3. To disguise something means to hide it or make it appear different so that people will not know about it or will not recognize it. disguise某物指把东西藏起来或者让它看起来不一样所以别人辨别不出来 He made no attempt to disguise his agitation... |