ornery
ornery — 形容詞
- ornerypositive
- more ornerycomparative
- most ornerysuperlative
1. becoming argumentative or irritable with little cause; being in a mood that make
脾氣暴躁的
容易動怒爭吵的
becoming argumentative or irritable with little cause; being in a mood that makes someone difficult to please or deal with — for example, an ornery neighbour who complains about every small noise.
Aoi's ornery grandfather refused to let anyone change the TV channel all evening.
Aoi 脾氣暴躁的爺爺一整晚都不讓任何人轉電視頻道。
ornery + noun (grandfather): describes a person
Joaquín bought an ornery old mule that kicked the fence every time he walked past the barn.
Joaquín 買了一頭脾氣暴躁的老騾子,每次他走過穀倉時,那頭騾子都會踢圍欄。
collocation: ornery old [animal]
Camille's usually sweet pug turned ornery and snapped at the mailman.
Camille 那隻平時很溫馴的巴哥犬突然變得暴躁起來,對著郵差低吼。
Bilal found the ornery customer hard to please — nothing on the menu was good enough.
Bilal 發現那位脾氣暴躁的客人很難伺候——菜單上沒有任何一道菜令他滿意。
The ornery tone of Folake's email made everyone in the office keep their distance.
Folake 那封郵件裡暴躁的語氣讓辦公室裡每個人都對她敬而遠之。
- grumpy
more general; can describe a temporary mood, while ornery often suggests a habitual or stubborn quality
- cranky
similar register but more common for short-term irritation; ornery feels more fixed and deliberate
- cantankerous
more formal and literary; ornery is informal and used in everyday speech
- irritable
describes a tendency to get annoyed easily, but less specific about argumentativeness than ornery
- good-natured
describes someone who is pleasant and easy to get along with
- agreeable
describes someone who willingly goes along with others' wishes
文法句型
ornery + noun
be + ornery
get + ornery
用法筆記
Common in informal American English, especially in the southern and western US. Frequently used with old (an ornery old horse, an ornery old man) though the person or thing need not be elderly.