reluctant
/rɪˈlʌktənt/ (bre, ipa) · /rɪˈlʌktənt/ (ame, ipa) · /ri-ˈlək-tənt/ (ame, mw)
reluctant — 形容詞
- reluctantpositive
- more reluctantcomparative
- most reluctantsuperlative
1. Not wanting to do something, which shows in slow actions or hesitation.
不情願
因不想做而表現遲疑或緩慢
Not wanting to do something, which shows in slow actions or hesitation.
After the crash, Eitan was reluctant to ride his bike to work.
車禍後,Eitan 一直不情願騎腳踏車上班。
reluctant + to-infinitive (pattern)
The puppy gave a reluctant bark when Folake shut the kitchen door.
Folake 關上廚房門時,那隻小狗不情願地叫了一聲。
reluctant before a noun = unwilling but doing it
Devika was reluctant to leave the party even though it was nearly midnight.
雖然已經快午夜了,Devika 還是不情願離開派對。
Leo offered a reluctant apology after his friend explained why he was hurt.
朋友解釋了自己為什麼受傷之後,Leo 不情願地道了歉。
Antonia’s parents were reluctant to let her travel alone to a new country.
Antonia 的父母不情願讓她獨自去一個陌生的國家旅行。
- unwilling
stronger and more definite than reluctant; suggests a clear refusal rather than hesitation
- hesitant
focuses on pausing or being unsure; a hesitant person may still be willing, just cautious
- loath
more formal and intense; suggests deep personal opposition to the action
- disinclined
polite and slightly formal; suggests a mild lack of desire rather than strong opposition
- averse
often used in 'not averse to' meaning mildly willing; otherwise suggests strong dislike of something
文法句型
reluctant + to-infinitive
reluctant + noun (reluctant agreement / reluctant smile)
用法筆記
Typically followed by a to-infinitive (reluctant to do something) or placed before a noun such as agreement, smile, or apology to describe an action performed without eagerness. The resistance is internal, not forced by external obstacles.