begrudged

英 [bɪˈɡrʌdʒd] 美 [bɪˈɡrʌdʒd]

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的过去分词和过去式

过去式:begrudged



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. I think, deep in his heart, Tom has always begrudged me.
    我想在汤姆的内心深处,他一贯是嫉妒我的。
  2. My mom, however, refused to budge. She stuck to her guns, and I begrudged her throughout my adolescence.
    但我妈在这点上拒绝让步,不容半点讨价还价的余地,这让我在整个青春期都十分记恨她。
  3. I begrudged being accountable for my time and having to kow-tow to the corporate ethos.
    我不愿付出自己的时间,也不想屈服于公司的理念。
  4. They begrudged every day they had to stay with their sick father.
    他们每天抱怨不得不和生病的父亲呆在一起。
  5. She begrudged her friend the award.
    她嫉妒她的朋友获奖。
  6. He had not begrudged her his time, and she wanted not to begrudge him her company now.
    从前,他没有舍不得把时间给她,如今,她却很吝啬自己的时间。
  7. He begrudged his friend the award.
    他嫉妒朋友的得奖。
  8. She begrudged paying so much for an ice-cream cone.
    她抱怨买个蛋筒冰淇淋这么贵。