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College English third edition
1 abandon English [? b? nd? N] beauty [? b? nd? n]

Give up, abandon; Abandon, discard; Submit; Stop execution, terminate

Indulge; Indulge; Completely succumbed to repression

Give up; Give up; Give up; abandon

Past tense: abandoned

Past participle: obsolete

Present participle: give up

Third person singular: abandon

1 give up; Give up; give up

If you abandon a place, an event or a person, you leave the place, the event or the person permanently or for a long time, especially when you shouldn't.

He claimed that his parents abandoned him. ...

He claimed that his parents abandoned him.

This road is full of abandoned vehicles.

The road is full of abandoned vehicles.

Give up or stop (an activity, a job, etc) halfway. )

If you give up an activity or a job, you stop before it is finished.

The authorities have given up any attempt to distribute food. ...

The authorities stopped their efforts to distribute food.

Investors in the plan were afraid of bankruptcy and decided to give up the project. The investors in this project decided to give up the project for fear of bankruptcy.

Give up (an idea or train of thought)

If you give up an idea or way of thinking, you no longer have that idea or way of thinking.

Logic prevailed and he gave up the idea.

Finally, reason prevailed and he dismissed the idea.

4 indulgence; abandon oneself to

If you indulge in an emotion, you will think a lot and feel it strongly, especially when others may think you are wrong.

We are afraid to indulge our feelings in case we appear weak or out of control.

We dare not indulge our emotions, lest we appear too weak or lack self-control.

5 let it drift; Self-indulgent

If you say that someone does something at will, you mean that they are wild and uncontrolled, and they don't consider or care how they should behave.

He spends money lavishly. ...

He squandered his money.

Their indulgence in children reflects their indulgence in their own lives.

Their indulgence of children reflects the vagrancy of their own lives.

Give up, give up, give up, leave, give up

These verbs or phrases all mean to give up.

Give up: emphasize giving up or abandoning people or things forever or completely, which may be forced or voluntary.

Desert: it mainly refers to the act of violating legal responsibilities and obligations, or one's own beliefs and vows, which contains more criticism.

Abandon: focus on cutting off emotional attachment and actively abandon people or things you like. It also means giving up faith or changing bad habits.

Leave: A common word that means to give up something or a career, or to terminate the relationship with the same person, but it does not involve motivation or results.

Give up: lingua franca, focusing on giving up without hope or due to external pressure.

2abash

English [? [b] beauty [? b]

Feel ashamed, embarrassed, or embarrassed

Embarrassed [embarrassed]

Embarrassed, embarrassed

Awkward; awkward

Embarrassed by shame; Embarrass; Shameful; embarrass

Past tense: embarrassed

Past participle: ashamed

Present participle: humiliation

Third person singular: abashes

Shame, blushing or embarrassment.

Your kindness makes me feel ashamed.

Your friendship makes me uneasy.

That will make the bird that keeps many people warm feel ashamed.

It can make birds uneasy and keep so much warmth.

That will make the birds shy. It hurts birds.

Nothing can beat him. Nothing can make him blush.

The child felt embarrassed when he saw a room full of strangers.

The child felt embarrassed when he saw a room full of strangers.

3abase

English [? Is it? S] beauty [? bes]

Humble; Shameful; Lower (status, status, etc.); & lt valley > down

Devaluation; Humiliation; A person who belittles others

Reduce; Inferiority; Lower the sail and flag; degrade

Past tense: abandoned

Past participle: obsolete

Present participle: degrade oneself.

Third person singular: inferiority complex

1. downgrade, reduce (state, value, state); Inferiority, self-mockery; descend

He who betrays his friends demeans himself.

People who betray their friends are actually belittling themselves.

The president is unwilling to degrade himself in front of the whole country.

The president is unwilling to lower his prestige in front of the whole country.

He refused to degrade himself in front of others.

He doesn't want to be belittled in front of others.

People who swear will only degrade themselves.

Swearing will only degrade yourself.

She wants to lower herself in front of this strong man and grovel before him.

In front of this powerful man, she makes herself more humble, humble and obedient.

The leader refused to degrade himself in front of his followers, which angered the king.

The leader refused to condescend to his subordinates, which made the emperor very angry.

3abate English [be? Beauty [bet]

Reduce, lighten; Cancel a law, make it invalid.

Relieving intransitive verbs; Lose effectiveness

Noun (abbreviation for noun) alleviates; give a discount

Reduce; Reduce; Mitigate; eliminate

Past tense: abandoned

Past participle: obsolete

Present participle: weaken

Third person singular: abates

① Weakening; Mitigate; drip

If something bad or unpopular decreases, it will become less intense or serious.

By the time they rounded Cape Horn, the storm had abated.

When they rounded Cape Horn, the storm had abated.

... a wave of crime that shows no signs of abating.

The criminal momentum shows no sign of abating.

We must reduce the noise pollution in our city.

We must eliminate the noise pollution in our city.

The doctor gave him some medicine to relieve the severe pain.

The doctor gave him some medicine to relieve the severe pain.

The storm began to abate slightly.

The storm began to abate slightly.

But the debate about industrial organization has not diminished.

However, the dispute about industrial trade unions has not subsided.

We've reduced some pretentious exaggerations.

We restrained our arrogance a little.