avaricious
/ˌævəˈrɪʃəs/ (bre, ipa) · /ˌævəˈrɪʃəs/ (ame, ipa) · /ˌa-və-ˈri-shəs/ (ame, mw)
avaricious — 形容詞
- avariciouspositive
- more avariciouscomparative
- most avaricioussuperlative
1. having or showing a desire for money and valuable things that is so strong it co
貪婪的
對金錢財物極度渴望的
having or showing a desire for money and valuable things that is so strong it controls your choices and behaviour
The avaricious landlord raised the rent each year, ignoring the tenants' growing needs.
那位貪婪的房東每年都調漲租金,絲毫不顧房客日益增加的困難。
avaricious landlord
An avaricious banker, Mr. Okonkwo cared only about his growing fortune, never about his clients.
作為一名貪婪的銀行家,Okonkwo 先生只在乎自己不斷增長的財富,從不關心客戶。
The board approved an avaricious plan designed to squeeze every last penny from poor families.
董事會批准了一個貪婪的計劃,目的就是要從貧困家庭身上榨乾每一分錢。
Mei-Lin refused to work for the avaricious company, whose practices she found deeply unfair.
Mei-Lin 拒絕為那家貪婪的公司工作,因為她認為該公司的做法極不公平。
The avaricious pursuit of profit left the factory workers without fair wages or safe conditions.
對利潤的貪婪追求,導致工人既領不到公平的薪水,也沒有安全的工作環境。
- greedy
more common and general; can apply to food, power, money, or attention (B1–B2 level)
- covetous
strongly wanting something that belongs to someone else; more literary
- rapacious
aggressively greedy, often implying violent or ruthless taking
- acquisitive
more neutral; describes a strong tendency to collect or buy things, not necessarily disapproving
文法句型
be + avaricious
avaricious + noun
用法筆記
Strongly disapproving. Unlike the more common word greedy, avaricious is almost always limited to a desire for money or material wealth — not for food, power, or attention. Frequently used in formal writing and literary criticism.