dressed
/drest/ (bre, ipa) · /drest/ (ame, ipa)
dressed — 形容詞
1. having put your clothes on so that you are ready to be seen by other people, ins
穿好衣服的
已經把衣服穿上的狀態
having put your clothes on so that you are ready to be seen by other people, instead of being naked or still in pyjamas.
Zayd was already dressed and waiting at the door before his sister woke up.
妹妹還沒起床,Zayd 早就穿好衣服在門口等了。
be dressed: ready to leave
Please get dressed quickly — the school bus will be here in five minutes.
快點把衣服穿好,校車五分鐘後就到了。
get dressed: action of putting clothes on
The little boy ran into the kitchen only half dressed, with one shoe in his hand.
那個小男孩衣服只穿了一半就跑進廚房,手上還拿著一隻鞋。
Lucía sleeps fully dressed when she stays at the airport overnight.
Lucía 在機場過夜時都穿著整套衣服睡覺。
The doctor asked me to stay dressed during the eye examination.
醫生要我在眼睛檢查時保持穿著衣服。
文法句型
be/get dressed
fully dressed
half dressed
用法筆記
Almost always used after the verb 'be' or 'get'. 'Be dressed' describes the result (you have clothes on); 'get dressed' describes the action (you are putting clothes on). Combine with 'fully', 'half', 'partly', or 'still' to say how complete the dressing is.
常見錯誤
2. having clothes on that match a certain colour, style, or costume — used to say h
穿著;打扮
穿著某種顏色或風格的衣服
having clothes on that match a certain colour, style, or costume — used to say how a person looks, e.g. 'in black', 'as a witch', 'smartly', or 'casually'.
The waiter was dressed in a long white apron and a black bow tie.
那位服務生穿著一條長長的白色圍裙,打著黑色領結。
dressed in + clothing description
Noa came to the Halloween party dressed as a vampire with red contact lenses.
Noa 來參加萬聖節派對時,打扮成戴紅色隱形眼鏡的吸血鬼。
dressed as + character
Lakan was smartly dressed for the wedding in a navy blue suit.
Lakan 為了參加婚禮,穿了一套海軍藍西裝,看起來很體面。
All the children were dressed in matching yellow raincoats for the field trip.
孩子們全都穿著成套的黃色雨衣去校外教學。
The old man was dressed entirely in black, from his hat to his shoes.
那位老先生從帽子到鞋子全部都穿著黑色。
文法句型
dressed in + clothing/colour
dressed as + character/role
well dressed
smartly dressed
用法筆記
Distinguish from sense 1: this sense always tells you WHAT the person is wearing (a style, colour, or costume). Almost always followed by 'in' (for clothes/colours) or 'as' (for a costume role). Adverbs like 'well', 'smartly', 'casually', 'badly' often appear before 'dressed'.