英:['begɜ:rɪ]
美:['begərɪ]
英:['begɜ:rɪ]
美:['begərɪ]
n.
赤贫
乞食的习惯
卑鄙
卑劣
beg·gar·y
be g ri
复数:beggaries
词根:beggar
adj.beggarly 赤贫的;像乞丐的
n.beggar 乞丐;穷人;家伙
begging 乞讨
v.begging 乞讨,乞求;行乞(beg的现在分词形式)
vt.beggar 使贫穷;使沦为乞丐
Noun
1. a solicitation for money or food (especially in the street by an apparently penniless person)
2. a state of extreme poverty or destitution;
"their indigence appalled him"
"a general state of need exists among the homeless"
14世纪晚期,“乞讨,行乞; 贫穷”,源自 beggar(n.)+ -y(2)。
The first known use of beggary was in the 14th century
beginningnoun
the point at which something begins
the beginning of the year
the first part
go back to the beginning of the song
an early stage or period
the beginnings of American history
beginningnoun
the point at which something begins
the beginning of the year
the first part
go back to the beginning of the song
an early stage or period
the beginnings of American history
beginnernoun
a person who is beginning something or doing something for the first time : an inexperienced person
beginnernoun
a person who is beginning something or doing something for the first time : an inexperienced person
begverb
to ask for money, food, or help as charity
beg in the streets
to ask earnestly or politely beg pardon
beg a favor
begverb
to ask for money, food, or help as charity
beg in the streets
to ask earnestly or politely beg pardon
beg a favor
beggarynoun
extreme poverty
1 This coin..will reduce the kingdom to beggary.
2 The door is not thrown open for beggary, ignorance, and rascality to vote themselves, in the shape of their representatives, the first places in outward dignity and efficient power.
3 "And, being rich, my virtue then shall be To say there is no vice but beggary."
4 Beggars and kings are in accord; they are all parasites, living on the same blood, stealing the same labor—one by beggary, the other by force.
5 The whole burden of taxation rested on their shoulders, and so ground down were they by ingeniously multiplied exactions, that thousands of them were reduced to literal beggary.
6 He raised some hundreds of families from beggary, by lending them five pounds a-piece only.
7 “There’s beggary in the love that can be reckoned,” he said.
8 To this contributed in no small degree the insane laudation of poverty by the Franciscans and the merit conceded to a life of beggary by the immense popularity of the Mendicant Orders.
9 There's beggary in the love that can be reckoned.
可以量深浅的爱是贫乏的.
10 To reduce to beggary; to impoverish; as, he had beggared himself.
11 Let us become one prosperous happy world without poverty, beggary, corruption, selfishness, disparity or inequality.
12 You will frequently find them in want of employment and of food, and reduced in a vast number of instances from the slightest causes to distress and beggary.
13 Those who live by beggary are flatterers and liars and detractors and thieves and avoiders of justice.
14 "They knew luxury; they knew beggary; but they never knew comfort" (Macaulay).
“他们了解奢侈;他们了解贫穷;但他们从不了解安逸”(麦考利)。
15 Fiercely the flames went up from city and hamlet, and the fugitives sank with fatigue and hunger in the snow, or, escaping beyond the borders, filled the towns of Europe with squalid beggary.
16 It is impossible not to deplore those events which have thus consigned anew these fertile regions to beggary and to barbarism.
17 To return empty-handed to Tortuga was to be a butt for every sneerer, a victim to unrelenting creditors; to the men beggary, to Pierre a loss of fame and all future promotion.
18 You'll rob Aldersbury right and left, bring half the town to beggary, strip the widow and the orphan, and put on a smug face!
19 A Jew of Bristol was called upon to furnish such an immense sum, that he refused, declaring that the payment of it would reduce him to beggary.
20 Idleness are the key of beggary.
懒为穷之因.