英:[ˈdɪəri]
美:[ˈdɪri]
英:[ˈdɪəri]
美:[ˈdɪri]
dear·ie
di ri
noun
(informal, old-fashioned) darling; dear.Do you need some help with that, dearie?
dear >entry 4 + -y, -ie
1 "' Accept only candy and flowers from gentlemen, dearie, '" he mimicked, and she burst into a giggle.
'从男人那里只能接受糖果和鲜花呀,亲爱的! '“他取笑似的模仿着,她也格格地笑了。”
2 "Oh, nothing, dearie. Nothing at all. Don’t fret."
3 The clerk replied, “‘Oh, don’t worry dearie, all the boys buy their clothes from us,’” he recounted in an interview with the Age newspaper in Melbourne.
4 “It’ll be over before long, dearie. Now tell me, has the water broke?”
5 Now stay within hearing of the 'phone, dearie, till I finish my work up-stairs.”
6 Hold him by the nose, dearie, then he'll splutter and wake up.
捏住他的鼻子,阿妹,他就会呼噜呼噜地醒过来。
7 The Sovereign's Piper of the Royal Regiment of Scotland will play 'Sleep, dearie, sleep'.
8 "I didn't realize— Oh, dearie, how hard it's been for you all this time, when you take it like that!"
9 "No, no, dearie, don't say that; talk ter him a little longer," said Mrs. Ash, coming forward, her face set in a tremulous smile.
10 He played the traditional lament "sleep, dearie, sleep" - the sound of which appeared to fade as he turned and walked down the internal steps of Westminster Abbey.
11 “I don’t think you could lie, dearie,” he said, and she smiled, thinking it a compliment.
12 There you go, dearie; that's Baby B, now take him away and leave me to chat to his Excellency.
这个给你,亲爱的;这就是婴儿B现在把他带走让我和这位美国文化专员好好聊聊。
13 “I’m afraid we’ve done bad service to our dearie,” Samuel said.
14 “Oh dearie me. Did you hear that, m’dear? They must be living in our home at St. Ninian’s Church. Oh, whatever shall we do? Our dear little home, full of dreadful rats.”
15 But, dearie, you must not let any thoughts of injustice, or of something not quite right, creep in.
16 Chorus: Oh dearie me / Something bad / Is happening / In the jungle / And in the heavens.
17 "I am going, only, dearie——" "Go away—please!"
18 They were a little brief, dearie: brief and rather vague.
19 Then on the top of that came your letter, and I couldn’t resist a sight of you, my dearie.
20 “I’ll tell you after we start,” she said, and then, to Eleanor, “Good luck to you, dearie. Watch out from now on how you go knocking people down.”