英:[ˈspɔɪlspɔ:t]
美:[ˈspɔɪlspɔrt]
英:[ˈspɔɪlspɔ:t]
美:[ˈspɔɪlspɔrt]
spoil·sport
spoIl sport
复数:spoilsports
The first known use of spoilsport was in 1785
spoke1 of 2
spoil1 of 2noun
stolen goods : plunder
spoil2 of 2verb
plunder entry 2, rob
to damage badly : ruin
spoiled my new sweater
to damage the quality or effect of
a quarrel spoiled the party
to decay or lose freshness, value, or usefulness by being kept too long
the milk spoiled
to damage the disposition of by letting get away with too much
spoil a child
to have an eager desire
spoiling for a fight
spoilsportnoun
a person who spoils the fun of others
1 Accuse me of being a spoilsport and I will plead guilty.
说我是个让人扫兴的人,我也承认.
2 The couple had planned a lavish wedding in April, but then the pandemic played spoilsport.
3 We don’t mean to be spoilsports, but there is the minor detail that no one elects Fed Governors.
4 Do you want the kid to grow up thinking god's a spoilsport?
你想要小孩认为上帝是一个扫兴的人?
5 “That left me to play the unenviable role,” she writes, “of spoilsport schoolmarm.”
6 “Sometimes archaeologists are considered spoilsports because they figure out that the story doesn’t quite fit,” Barfield said with a laugh.
7 However, as Qlik earns nearly 2/3rd of its revenue from outside of the Americas, we expect currency fluctuations to play a minor spoilsport in the near term.
8 The Reign have no problem playing spoilsport to Holiday’s farewell.
9 If other people believe that it brings luck or brings face, I'd be a spoilsport.
如果其他人认为它能带来运气或者面子,我倒很愿意破坏他们的乐趣。
10 Battles are waged, speeches are made and foreign enemies soon become the least of Luna’s problems: Bureaucrats, cowards and other homegrown spoilsports continually try to sabotage his unconventional plans.
11 Now he’s gone, the spoilsport Japanese FA ousting him lest his no-nonsense approach lead to under-performances or a tremendous ruckus on the global stage.
12 Don't want to be a spoilsport, but I'm ready for summer to finally end.Oh.
13 Catch-up services and recordable devices mean many don't want to know the result or ending even after it has been broadcast, which renders the social media sites swarming with spoilsports a complete no-go zone.
14 Oh, don't be a spoilsport. Let them try it.
15 But who wants to be a spoilsport when so much fun is being had?
16 I also don’t want to be a spoilsport who vetoes his choices just because they aren’t what I want to watch.
17 A few spoilsports asked whether the government had its priorities straight, given that many of the country’s villages still lack running water.
18 Yet ambiguous claims involving spirituality and a sort of interpersonal energy transference are unsupported, and there’s an underlying implication that doubters are just spoilsports.
19 “The person who tells people how an effect is achieved is often resented, considered a spoilsport, a party-pooper,” he wrote, around a decade ago, in a paper called “Explaining the ‘Magic’ of Consciousness.”
20 I’m not interested in being a spoilsport, or even a killjoy trying to “improve” a great holiday tradition.