despised
/dɪˈspaɪz/ (bre, ipa) · [dɪspˈaɪzd] /dɪˈspaɪz/ (ame, ipa) · [dɪspˈaɪzd] /di-ˈspīz/ (ame, mw)
despised — 動詞
- despisedpresent simple I / you / we / they
- despiseds3rd person singular
- despiseding-ing form
- despisededpast simple
1. to hate someone or something very strongly and have no respect for them, because
鄙視;厭惡
極度討厭並看不起
to hate someone or something very strongly and have no respect for them, because you believe they are worthless, morally bad, or inferior to you.
Lakan despised the corruption he saw in the local government offices.
Lakan 鄙視他在地方政府辦公室看到的腐敗現象。
active transitive: person + despised + abstract concept
Yuki felt despised by her teammates after she missed the winning shot in the final game.
Yuki 在總決賽中投失關鍵一球後,覺得自己被隊友看不起。
adjective pattern: feel + despised + by [agent]
The stray cats were despised by some residents, who complained about them to the city council.
那些流浪貓被某些居民厭惡,他們每個月都向市議會反映。
Omar despised the long daily commute through heavy traffic but could not afford to move closer.
Omar 厭惡每天在擁擠的車流中長途通勤,但負擔不起搬到離公司更近的地方。
Tariq was despised by other journalists for spreading false stories to get ahead in his career.
Tariq 因為散播假新聞來換取事業上的進步,而被其他記者鄙視。
- loathe
similar intensity but focuses on disgust or revulsion rather than looking down on someone; 'loathe' often pairs with things (loathe the smell) while 'despise' more often targets people or behaviours
- detest
slightly more formal; expresses strong dislike without necessarily implying the moral superiority that 'despise' carries
- scorn
focuses on the 'looking down on' aspect; implies open rejection or refusal to take something seriously
- abhor
very formal and intense; suggests moral outrage or disgust rather than contempt
文法句型
despised + noun/pronoun (active)
be despised + by someone/something (passive)
feel despised (adjective pattern)
用法筆記
Commonly appears in the passive (be despised) or as a past-participle adjective (feel despised, look despised). The active form (someone despised something) describes a past action; the passive/adjective form describes a state of being hated. The word carries a stronger sense of moral judgment than simply hate — it implies the person despising feels superior to the target.