scoffed
英 [skɒft]
美 [skɑːft]
v. 嘲笑; 讥讽; 贪婪地吃; 狼吞虎咽
scoff的过去分词和过去式
柯林斯词典
- VERB 嘲笑;讥讽;嘲弄
If youscoff atsomething, you speak about it in a way that shows you think it is ridiculous or inadequate.- At first I scoffed at the notion...
刚开始我对那种想法嗤之以鼻。 - You may scoff but I honestly feel I'm being cruel only to be kind...
你可能不以为然,但我真的认为我狠下心来只是出于一片好意。 - 'You'll have to do better than that,' Joanna scoffed.
“你可得做得比那好,”乔安娜讥讽地说。
- At first I scoffed at the notion...
- VERB 贪婪地吃;狼吞虎咽
If youscofffood, you eat it quickly and greedily.- The pancakes were so good that I scoffed the lot.
那些薄饼太好吃了,我狼吞虎咽地都吃下去了。
- The pancakes were so good that I scoffed the lot.
双语例句
- Certain critics scoffed, averring that nobody would pay to see it.
某些批评家大加嘲弄,断言没有人会花钱去看那玩意儿。 - At the time, many scoffed at this idea.
当时,许多人对这种观点嗤之以鼻。 - Leaders in the Liberated Areas scoffed at that theory.
解放区的领导人嘲笑了这种理论。 - Marco Polo was scoffed at.
马可波罗受到了讥嘲。 - And later, President Thomas Jefferson scoffed at the idea of having a day of thanksgiving.
之后,杰弗逊总统还对这件事嗤之以鼻。 - This idea was scoffed at.
但这个提法却遭到了嘲笑。 - Could he really believe the impossible legends his son had scoffed at?
他真的相信他儿子嘲笑过的那些不可能的传说吗? - When Mr O 'Neill forecast that China would overtake the US by 2027, some scoffed.
奥尼尔当初预测中国经济到2027年将超过美国时,一些人嗤之以鼻。 - I have scoffed them in my heart.
我心里暗暗嗤笑他们。 - A hundred years ago people scoffed at the idea.
一百年前人们曾嘲笑过这种想法。