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单词 ingrate
释义

Definition of ingrate in English:

ingrate

noun ˈɪnɡreɪtɪnˈɡreɪtˈɪnɡreɪt
literary, formal
  • An ungrateful person.

    忘恩负义的人

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Many English people see us as whining ingrates.
    • In the future, selfish ingrates will simply launch his remains into the sun.
    • He shudders to think what this here group of punks and ingrates would do to a smiley guy like Clyde.
    • The sad fact for all you ingrates is that seh is indisposed doing the power-suited corporate thing today and I've got time on my hands.
    • Immigrant kids are more likely to listen to their parents, and they tend not to be alienated ingrates who take their country's prosperity and opportunities for granted.
    • The largesse doled out to these ingrates includes, to name but some of the freebies, house; car; medical care; and various cash benefits.
    • But what they give those ingrates is a mind-blowing rock show.
    • First impressions are that it is a joyless, characterless pub, staffed by disinterested graduate students and other ingrates, with bizarrely obscure (but not in a good way) range of beers.
    • They go to battle and risk their lives so ingrates like you can live in luxury.
    • In her book the unconverted Left are still a bunch of ingrates demanding the impossible.
adjective ˈɪnɡreɪtɪnˈɡreɪtˈɪnɡreɪt
literary, formal
  • Ungrateful.

    忘恩负义的人

    Example sentencesExamples
    • By the way, I've signed on for e-mail updates from all the organizations above (so you won't have to, you ingrate weasels).
    • I think it's because the ingrate viewing public knows about as much about history as they know about astral projection and they just hate being reminded of how utterly ignorant they all are.
    • But eventually, in this late case, the ingrate audience stays away in droves.
    • We can afford a few traitorous little ingrate rich kids.
    • The feudal deference, and the ingrate privileges, crumble under the pressure for social equity.

Origin

Late Middle English (as an adjective): from Latin ingratus, from in- 'not' + gratus 'grateful'.

Definition of ingrate in US English:

ingrate

nounˈinɡrātˈɪnɡreɪt
  • An ungrateful person.

    忘恩负义的人

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Immigrant kids are more likely to listen to their parents, and they tend not to be alienated ingrates who take their country's prosperity and opportunities for granted.
    • Many English people see us as whining ingrates.
    • In her book the unconverted Left are still a bunch of ingrates demanding the impossible.
    • In the future, selfish ingrates will simply launch his remains into the sun.
    • The largesse doled out to these ingrates includes, to name but some of the freebies, house; car; medical care; and various cash benefits.
    • He shudders to think what this here group of punks and ingrates would do to a smiley guy like Clyde.
    • First impressions are that it is a joyless, characterless pub, staffed by disinterested graduate students and other ingrates, with bizarrely obscure (but not in a good way) range of beers.
    • But what they give those ingrates is a mind-blowing rock show.
    • They go to battle and risk their lives so ingrates like you can live in luxury.
    • The sad fact for all you ingrates is that seh is indisposed doing the power-suited corporate thing today and I've got time on my hands.
adjectiveˈinɡrātˈɪnɡreɪt
  • Ungrateful.

    忘恩负义的人

    Example sentencesExamples
    • I think it's because the ingrate viewing public knows about as much about history as they know about astral projection and they just hate being reminded of how utterly ignorant they all are.
    • By the way, I've signed on for e-mail updates from all the organizations above (so you won't have to, you ingrate weasels).
    • The feudal deference, and the ingrate privileges, crumble under the pressure for social equity.
    • We can afford a few traitorous little ingrate rich kids.
    • But eventually, in this late case, the ingrate audience stays away in droves.

Origin

Late Middle English (as an adjective): from Latin ingratus, from in- ‘not’ + gratus ‘grateful’.

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更新时间:2024/12/27 17:42:49