英语

发音

  • (標準英音) 國際音標(幫助)/ˈdɛstɪtjuːt/
  • (y音合併) 國際音標(幫助)/ˈdɛstɪtʃuːt/
  • (通用美式) 國際音標(幫助)/ˈdɛstɪtuːt/
  • (美国)音频(檔案)
  • (英国)音频(檔案)
  • 斷字:des‧ti‧tute

词源 1

源自中古英語 ,源自拉丁語

形容词

(比較級,最高級)

  1. (后接介词) 缺少...的,没有...的
    • 1827, James Fenimore Cooper, The Prairie Chapter 9
      Now, though this region may scarcely be said to be wedded to science, being to all intents a virgin territory as respects the enquirer into natural history, still it is greatly destitute of the treasures of the vegetable kingdom.
    • 1611 King James Bible, Psalms 141:8
      In thee is my trust; leave not my soul destitute.
  2. 一贫如洗的,身无分文的
    • May 24, 2018, Alex Vadukul in The New York Times, The Forgotten Entertainer Rag
      In 1907 he moved from St. Louis to New York City, arriving as a famous composer. But he died a decade later at the age of 49, destitute in an asylum on Wards Island as ragtime was fading in popularity.
    • 1918, Henry Leyford Gates translating Aurora Mardiganian, Ravished Armenia
      according to the most careful estimates, 3,950,000 destitute peoples, mostly women and children who had been driven many of them as far as one thousand miles from home, turn their pitiful faces toward America for help in the reconstructive period in which we are now living.
    • 1841, Charles DickensBarnaby Rudge, Chapter 45
      ‘Do you know how pinched and destitute I am?’ she retorted. ‘I do not think you do, or can. If you had eyes, and could look around you on this poor place, you would have pity on me. []
近义词
  • 参见Thesaurus:impoverished

词源 2

源自中古英語 ,源自前文的形容词。

动词

(第三人稱單數簡單現在時,現在分詞,一般過去時及過去分詞)

  1. (及物) 剥夺...的财产,资源等,使...一贫如洗

拉丁语

形容词

  1. 的呼格陽性單數
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.