gluttony

/ˈɡlʌtəni/ (bre, ipa) · /ˈɡlʌtəni/ (ame, ipa) · /ˈglə-tə-nē ˈglət-nē/ (ame, mw)

gluttony — noun

1. The settled practice of consuming far more food and drink than the body needs, s

1.名詞B2
釋義

The settled practice of consuming far more food and drink than the body needs, seen as a personal weakness; in Christian tradition, one of the seven deadly sins that corrupt the soul.

例句

Uncle Rashid joked that his gluttony at holiday dinners was a family tradition.

gluttony + at [event]

Medieval church teaching listed gluttony among the seven deadly sins, alongside pride and envy.

gluttony in religious context: seven deadly sins

同義詞
  • overeating

    A neutral, everyday word for eating more than needed; carries no moral judgement about the person's character

  • greed

    Much broader — covers excessive desire for money, power, or anything, not restricted to food and drink

  • overindulgence

    Can describe excess in any pleasure (drinking, shopping, screen time); lacks the specific moral weight of gluttony

反義詞
  • temperance

    The virtue of self-control, especially in eating and drinking; seen as the direct opposite of gluttony in Christian teaching

  • moderation

    The general practice of avoiding extremes in any area of life

  • abstinence

    Choosing to go without food or drink altogether, often for religious or health reasons

文法句型

act of + gluttony

guilty of + gluttony

gluttony + and + [another sin or vice]

用法筆記

Distinguish from 'overeating': overeating is a neutral term for eating too much on one occasion, while gluttony carries a strong moral judgement and implies a habitual pattern of excess that reflects poorly on a person's character.

常見錯誤

I ate three slices of cake — what gluttony!
I ate three slices of cake
💡that was greedy of me.' — Gluttony is a formal and serious word describing an ongoing habit or a sin; it sounds unnatural for a single casual overindulgence.