1.羡慕,嫉妒
2.吝惜,不愿给
3.嫉妒
4.〈古〉鸣不平
1.羡慕,嫉妒
2.吝惜,不愿给
3.嫉妒
4.〈古〉鸣不平
1.怨恨,妒嫉;恶意
1.to give something without wanting to
1.a feeling of anger toward someone because they have done something to you that does not seem right or fair
1.and she would have grudged such an elevation to one whom she had been always trying to depress.
她不想让一个她一直想压制的人受此抬举。
2.Nothing has ever been grudged for her improvement or comfort.
为了她的上进和快乐,钱化得并不吝啬。
3.So, he has been differing desperately to her tone, but she never and really once grudged him while the beginning knows.
所以,初识时,他对她的口气向来差得要命,但她却从来没有真正地讨厌过他。
4.Her allowance is very liberal; nothing has ever been grudged for her improvement or comfort.
她的生活费非常充裕,凡是能保障她生活舒适地位改善的东西,从来就不缺少。
5."He was a miserly wretch who grudged us food to eat, and clothes to wear" (Charles Dickens).
“他是个吝啬的坏蛋,他克扣我们的伙食和穿衣”(查尔斯?狄)
6.Saw on the faces of some of them that they'd grudged lending their readers and would always regret this.
我从一些孩子的脸上看出,他们曾因不愿把书借给她而懊悔不已。
7.But if after this period England no longer grudged his fame. . .
从此之后,即使英格兰不再对他的名声心怀嫉恨……
8.He grudged paying so much for such bad food.
他不愿意为这么糟的食物付那么多钱。
9.Granny grudged to part with anything, including the disused.
奶奶什么都舍不得扔掉,连不再用的东西也不例外。
10.She grudged talking with me.
她不愿和我谈话。