accusatory如何读

英:[əˈkju:zətəri]

美:[əˈkjuzətɔri]

accusatory是什么意思

adj. (形容词)
  1. 非难的
  2. 控告的
  3. 责问的
  4. 指责的
  5. 指控的
  6. 控诉的
  7. 问罪的
  8. 告发的
  9. 谴责的

accusatory自然拼读

ac·cu·sa·to·ry

kyu z to ri

accusatory词根

词根:accuse

adj.

accused 被控告的

accusing 指责的;非难的;归咎的

accusatorial 责问的;控告者的

n.

accusation 控告,指控;谴责

accused 被告

accuser 原告;控告者;指责者

accusal 谴责;控告;罪名(等于accusation)

v.

accused 指责;控告(accuse的过去式)

accusing 指责;指控(accuse的ing形式)

vi.

accuse 指责;控告

vt.

accuse 控告,指控;谴责;归咎于

accusatory英英释义

Adjective

1. containing or expressing accusation;

"an accusitive forefinger"

"black accusatory looks"

"accusive shoes and telltale trousers"- O.Henry

"his accusing glare"

accusatory词源中文解释

大约1600年,“包含控告”的意思,源自拉丁语 accusatorius “关于检察官的,涉及起诉的; 提出控诉的”,来自 accusare “追究责任,对...提出控诉”(见 accuse)。相关词汇: Accusatorial(1801); accusatorially。

accusatory词源英文解释

borrowed from Latin accūsātōrius "of a prosecutor, denunciatory," from accūsātor "prosecutor, accuser" (from accūsāre "to call to account, accuse" + -tor, agent suffix) + -ius, adjective suffix

The first known use of accusatory was in the 14th century

accusatory儿童词典英英释义

acetaminophennoun

a crystalline compound used in medicine to relieve pain and fever

acellularadjective

not made up of cells

ace1 of 3noun

a playing card with one large figure in its center

a very small amount or degree

within an ace of winning

a point scored on a serve (as in tennis) that an opponent fails to touch

a golf hole made in one stroke

a combat pilot who has shot down at least five enemy airplanes

a person who is expert at something

ace2 of 3verb

to score an ace against

the tennis player aced her opponent

to earn the grade of A on (an examination)

ace3 of 3adjective

of first or high rank or quality

ace1 of 3noun

a playing card with one large figure in its center

a very small amount or degree

within an ace of winning

a point scored on a serve (as in tennis) that an opponent fails to touch

a golf hole made in one stroke

a combat pilot who has shot down at least five enemy airplanes

a person who is expert at something

ace2 of 3verb

to score an ace against

the tennis player aced her opponent

to earn the grade of A on (an examination)

ace3 of 3adjective

of first or high rank or quality

accustomedadjective

customary

my accustomed lunch hour

familiar with

being in the habit or custom

accustomed to making decisions

accustomverb

to make familiar

accuseverb

to blame for wrongdoing : to charge with a fault and especially with a crime

accuseverb

to blame for wrongdoing : to charge with a fault and especially with a crime

accusednoun

one charged with wrongdoingespecially: the defendant in a criminal case

accusatoryadjective

containing or expressing accusation

an accusatory look

accusatory 例句

1 “I don’t even know what ‘accusatory’ means, so how could that be my tone?”

2 Even lesser known was Vivian Reed, whose ferocious, accusatory rendition of “God Bless the Child” evoked the mature Lena Horne in her one-woman Broadway show more than three decades ago.

3 Though it features some high-kicking dancing from its personable and industrious ensemble, this production gives the impression of always treading carefully, with furrowed brow, stooped shoulders and an accusatory glare.

4 The arguments over brushing her hair have turned accusatory lately.

5 The film’s initial, documentary sequences of plywood shacks and pitiful tents, hopeless against the rain, are searingly accusatory.

6 “It can be sexist and accusatory,” says Williams.

7 He nodded an emphatic, busy, righteous little nod, and looked at me with a strange, glowing, accusatory expression that said, “And if she dies, let it be on your conscience.”

8 And while some carry their burden quietly and alone, others insist on sharing it, like those people who take deep, accusatory sighs when you bump into them on the subway.

9 His delivery, in German, was accusatory, wrathful, heroic and venomous by turns.

10 There was nothing judgmental or accusatory about the question, so why did I still feel like an idiot?

11 “Are you on 58th Street in Oakland?” he asked, not exactly in an accusatory tone, but with a sleuth’s satisfaction.

12 At first Herbie shied away from Stephanie because she was a moody person who seldom spoke, and somehow her silence, her lack of complaints, placed her above the other VISTAs in an almost accusatory fashion.

13 There's something volatileand magical about a corpse - inert but accusatory, charged with guilt,loss and fascination with our own mortality.

14 Phillips weakly defended himself but, amid a welcome backlash, deleted an accusatory tweet and updated his article.

15 By dropping Neon Bible's accusatory standpoint, the Suburbs delivers a life-affirming message similar to Funeral's: We're all in this together.

通过丢下neonBible上非难的立场,TheSuburbs传达了类似于Funeral的,坚定生活观的信息:我们一起,都在这里。

16 In the case of “Dark Earth,” though, the effect seems accusatory: For a viewer to see his or her reflection in one of these blackened landscapes is to be implicated in its exploitation and degradation.

17 Honestly express your needs and insecurities in a non-threatening, non-accusatory way so your partner doesn't get defensive.

坦白表达你的需求和不安,在无指责无威胁的方式下,这样你的伴侣不会防守。

18 At least he — and the rest of us guys — won’t have to see any more of those awful, accusatory looks.

19 “Girl,” Wilem said in a vaguely accusatory way and turned to me.

20 The explosive “Be Afraid,” which is written in an accusatory second-person sneer, is, on one level, a straightforward indictment of political apathy among his musical peers and the country at large.

accusatory 同义词

2 法官和检查官分立进行并以控告为主要内容的

accusatorial

6 指责的

accusing

7 责难的

accusing

14 责问

pelt impeach

15 告发的

criminatory

accusatory 短语相关

相关词