begrudging

英 [bɪˈɡrʌdʒɪŋ] 美 [bɪˈɡrʌdʒɪŋ]

v.  嫉妒; 对(某人所享有的)感到不满; 勉强做; 不乐意地做(或付出)
begrudge的现在分词



柯林斯词典

  1. VERB 妒忌;嫉妒
    If you do not begrudge someone something, you do not feel angry, upset, or jealous that they have got it.
    1. I certainly don't begrudge him the Nobel Prize.
      我当然不会嫉妒他得了诺贝尔奖。
  2. VERB 吝啬;吝惜;舍不得
    If you do not begrudge something such as time or money, you do not mind giving it up.
    1. I do not begrudge the money I have lost.
      我不在乎自己丢的钱。

双语例句

  1. The glimmers of begrudging praise went to private banks.
    私人银行得到了人们的些许称赞。
  2. But its purchases have been intermittent and begrudging.
    但欧央行的购买断断续续、不够果断。
  3. He only received a miserly, beggarly, begrudging pittance.
    他只得到一份少得可怜的微薄津贴。
  4. Trying to hold on to your money or agonising over it and begrudging spending it reveals that you are too attached.
    要抓住钱不放、或者为钱而伤心及在花钱上的吝惜都表明你太依恋金钱。