resent

/rɪˈzent/ (bre, ipa) · /rɪˈzent/ (ame, ipa) · /ri-ˈzent/ (ame, mw)

resent — 動詞

  • resentpresent simple I / you / we / they
  • resentshe / she / it
  • resentedpast simple
  • resenting-ing form

1. to feel angry and upset about something because you believe it is unfair or that

1.動詞及物B2
釋義

怨恨;不滿

因感到不公平而氣憤

to feel angry and upset about something because you believe it is unfair or that someone is treating you badly — for example, resenting having to do extra work while co-workers do less, or resenting the way a manager speaks to you.

例句

Jisoo resented having to work late while her colleagues left early.

Jisoo 對於同事早早下班、自己卻得加班感到不滿。

resent + V-ing

Tamar bitterly resented the rent increase her landlord imposed every year.

Tamar 對房東每年調漲房租這件事深感怨恨。

collocation: bitterly resent

同義詞
  • begrudge

    Often implies envy and a sense that someone does not deserve what they have (e.g. begrudge someone their success), whereas resent focuses more on unfair treatment of oneself.

  • take offense at

    More about feeling personally insulted or hurt by a specific remark or action; resent can be about ongoing situations, not just single events.

  • be bitter about

    More informal and descriptive; implies a lingering, sour feeling that may have built up over time.

反義詞
  • welcome

    To be happy to receive or accept something — direct opposite of the forced-acceptance feeling in resent.

  • accept

    To willingly agree to something; resent is the emotional rejection of something one is forced to accept.

文法句型

resent + noun/pronoun

resent + gerund (V-ing)

resent + someone + gerund

resent + the fact that + clause

用法筆記

Emotionally stronger than 'dislike' or 'be annoyed at'; implies a sense of unfairness or being treated unjustly. Always transitive — must take a direct object, a gerund, or a that-clause. Common in written English but also used in everyday speech when expressing strong frustration.

常見錯誤

I resent to do all the cleaning.
I resented doing all the cleaning.
💡resent takes a gerund (V-ing), not an infinitive.
She resented me a little.' (when meaning mild annoyance)
She was slightly annoyed with me.
💡resent expresses strong, lasting bitterness, not mild irritation.