prigs

听听怎么读
[prɪgz]
是什么意思
  • n.

    一本正经的人( prig的名词复数 );

  • 英英释义

    prig[ priɡ ]

    • n.a person regarded as arrogant and annoying

      同义词:snobsnotsnoot

    学习怎么用

    双语例句

    用作名词(n.)
    1. He had been railed against by them as a prig and a poseur.
      他们责骂他是一个沾沾自喜、装腔作势的人。
    2. Charles thinks he's better than the rest of us, the self-righteous prig!
      查尔斯认为他比我们大家都强,真是个自以为是的家伙!
    3. The transition from libertine to prig was so complete.
      一个酒徒色鬼竟然摇身一变就成了道学先生。
    4. If one wishes to be a prig or a Puritan, one can flaunt one's moral views about them.
      一个人要是愿意当道学先生或清教徒,当然可以炫耀自己的伦理观点。
    5. She said, "That Flora tries to take you on the prig again, you tell me-will you?"
      她说:“要是弗洛拉再带你去偷东西,你就告诉我,知道么?”

    权威例句

    Whigs, prigs and historians of science
    Puritans and Prigs: An Anatomy of Zealotry
    Harry Potter and the Joyless Prigs
    Professors, Prigs and Pedants — the Critics of Empire
    Whigs, Prigs, and Politics: Problems in the Contemporary History of Science
    Cross coves, buzzers and general sorts of prigs
    The Charges & Countercharges of Self-Righteous Prigs. (the Media)
    Prävention und Resilienzförderung in Grundschulen - PRiGS
    CROSS COVES, BUZZERS AND GENERAL SORTS OF PRIGS: Juvenile Crime and the Criminal 'Underworld' in the Early Nineteenth Century
    Writers and critics in the face of the educational book: "[Real literature] is ignored by pedants and prigs"