malinger如何读

英:[məˈlɪŋgə(r)]

美:[məˈlɪŋɡɚ]

malinger是什么意思

  • vi.装病(以逃避工作)

malinger自然拼读

ma·lin·ger

m lIng gr

malinger变形

malingers, malingering, malingered

malinger扩展

malingerer (n.)

malinger英英释义

verb

intransitive verb

to pretend or exaggerate incapacity or illness (as to avoid duty or work)

His boss suspected him of malingering because of his frequent absences from work.

malinger词源中文解释

"装病逃避责任",1820年,源自法语 malingrer "受苦",这是一个俚语词,可能曾经意味着"假装生病",源自 malingre "虚弱的,病态的"(13世纪),其起源不确定,可能是 mingre "病态的,悲惨的"和 malade "生病的"的混合词。 Mingre 本身是 maigre "瘦弱的"(见 meager)和 haingre "生病的,憔悴的"的混合词,可能源自日耳曼语(类似于中古高地德语 hager "瘦")。

在法语中,这个词的意义演变是通过乞丐假装生病或展示假伤口来引起同情。 Malingerer 自1761年以来就有记载,出现在德·萨克斯的翻译中; malingering 作为动名词自1778年以来就有记载。相关: Malingered。

malinger词源英文解释

French malingre sickly

The first known use of malinger was in 1820

malinger儿童词典英英释义

Manchunoun

a member of an Indigenous people of Manchuria who conquered China and established a dynasty there in 1644

the language of the Manchu people

mamanoun

mother entry 1 sense 1a

maltreatverb

to treat unkindly or roughly : abuse

maltreatverb

to treat unkindly or roughly : abuse

Maltesenoun

a person born or living in Malta

the Semitic language of the Maltese people

any of a breed of toy dogs with a long silky white coat, a black nose, and dark eyes

malingerverb

to pretend to be sick or injured so as to avoid duty or work

malinger医学词典英英释义

malingerintransitive verb

to pretend or exaggerate incapacity or illness (as to avoid duty or work)

malinger 例句

1 A doctor said in a Feb. 1 memo that Surber has stopped taking his medication for long periods of time and said he suspects Surber is “malingering for the purpose of avoiding punishment.”

2 Or was Lester predisposed to malingering and clever maneuvering, but just kept playing the underdog, er, victim, because he got more traction that way when he didn’t have the upper hand?

3 On Monday, prosecutor Stuart Silberg said Ms. Ortega could have been malingering, or faking her psychiatric state.

4 The retirees had met the other criteria for a successful claim, which includes hours of validity testing to show that their daily lives are significantly impaired and that they are not malingering.

5 Under cross-examination by James Lewis, a lawyer representing the U.S. government, Kopelman said he was always alert to the possibility a patient might be “malingering” or exaggerating.

6 The first was the widespread sense that poor people tended to be so because they were lazy and immoral, and that helping them would only encourage their malingering.

7 I read books on headaches, on addiction, migraines, malingering, the ethics of abandoning the ill and the breakdown of a doctor-patient relationship.

8 Records could also clarify cases where evaluators may suspect malingering, or feigning an illness to avoid incarceration.

9 Russell asked whether a test Hyde administered to Ramos included a feature to check if he was malingering, or not being honest with him, as other psychiatric tests do.

10 His boss suspected him of malingering because of his frequent absences from work.

11 This time, as before, his malingering was mocked mercilessly on social media: a doctored picture of him clutching the Indonesian equivalent of an Oscar in his hospital bed was widespread.

12 Founded in 1971 by Bill Gale, a malingering former Army Lieutenant Colonel, Posse Comitatus advocated for armed insurrection.

13 When she took time off for carpel tunnel surgery on her weapon hand — necessary to do her job — department officials accused her of medical malingering, she said, using leave time to be with her kids. 

14 At one point that, Dr. Frumkin said that Mr. Hernandez was “not bright enough to malinger subtle features of a severe mental disorder.”

15 Local doctors had variously attributed his pain to a mental illness, malingering, drug-seeking behavior or a dental problem.

16 She looked up malinger and read the definition: “To pretend to be ill in order to escape duty or work.’

17 The question is obviously especially consequential when deeming a person malingering means they could be put to death.

18 Department of Behavioral Health, wrote in a report that she believed Trotman was “malingering” his mental illness, when he was actually well enough to understand the legal proceedings in his case, a prosecutor asserted.

19 The judge said he understood Cowell has a history of mental illness but that doctors who had previously examined him felt he was “malingering”to avoid standing trial.

20 The decision against Robert Krebs came after a psychologist determined Krebs didn’t have a mental illness or cognitive impairment and was instead malingering to avoid prosecution for the robbery last year in Tucson.

malinger 同义词

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