|
|
NOUN |
|
|
/praɪd/ |
|
| |
1 | U a feeling of pleasure and satisfaction that you get when you , or someone connected with you , have achieved something special 自豪感;骄傲 |
| You could see the pride in their faces when they talked about their daughter’ s acting career. 当他们谈论他们女儿的演艺生涯时,你可以看得出他们脸上的骄傲。 |
| take/feel/express pride in sth All the craftsmen take great pride in their work. 所有手艺人都为自己的作品感到非常自豪。 |
| with pride She can certainly look back on her performance with pride. 她当然可以自豪地回顾她的表演。 |
| a sense/glow of pride It gave her a sense of pride to carry the flag. 扛旗给了她一种自豪感。 |
| |
2 | U a feeling of respect for yourself 自尊;尊严 |
| hurt/wound/injure sb’ s pride It hurts his pride that his wife has a job and he doesn’ t. 他妻子有工作而他却没有,这伤了他的自尊。 |
| restore/salvage pride Their win has restored national pride. 他们的胜利重新树立了民族自豪感。 |
| 2a | a feeling that you are better or more important than other people 自大;自负;骄傲 | | foolish pride 愚蠢的自大 | |
| |
3 | C a group of lions 狮群 |
PHRASES |
- | sb’ s pride and joy |
| a person or possession that gives someone a lot of happiness and satisfaction |
| 某人的快乐之源 |
| |
| |
- | the pride of sth |
| someone or something that makes the people in a particular place feel very proud |
| 某个地方的骄傲 |
| |
| the sad death of an industry that was once the pride of Scotland 一度是苏格兰引以为傲的产业令人悲哀的消亡 |
| |
- | take/have pride of place |
| to be put in the place that is most central or important |
| 处于最中心(或最重要)的地位 |
| |
| Pride of place in her collection goes to the gold medal she won at the 1996 Olympics. 在她的收藏品中占据最重要地位的是她在1996年奥运会上赢得的金牌。 |
| |
|