She cursed him for ruining her life. 她诅咒他,说他毁了她的一生。
He cursed me, using a lot of rude epithets like"bloody". 他用了一大串诸如“该死的”之类的粗俗词语来诅咒我。
One that is cursed or damned. 被咒骂者,被诅咒者
cursed
[ adj ]
deserving a curse; sometimes used as an intensifier
<adj.all> villagers shun the area believing it to be cursed cursed with four daughter not a cursed drop his cursed stupidity I'll be cursed if I can see your reasoning
in danger of the eternal punishment of Hell
<adj.all> poor damned souls
Curse \Curse\ (k?rs), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Cursed} (k?rst) or {Curst}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Cursing}.] [AS. cursian, corsian, perh. of Scand. origin; cf. Dan. korse to make the sign of the cross, Sw. korsa, fr. Dan. & Sw. kors cross, Icel kross, all these Scand. words coming fr. OF. crois, croiz, fr. L. crux cross. Cf. {Cross}.] 1. To call upon divine or supernatural power to send injury upon; to imprecate evil upon; to execrate.
Thou shalt not . . . curse the ruler of thy people. --Ex. xxii. 28.
Ere sunset I'll make thee curse the deed. --Shak.
2. To bring great evil upon; to be the cause of serious harm or unhappiness to; to furnish with that which will be a cause of deep trouble; to afflict or injure grievously; to harass or torment.
On impious realms and barbarous kings impose Thy plagues, and curse 'em with such sons as those. --Pope.
{To curse by bell, book, and candle}. See under {Bell}.
Cursed \Curs"ed\ (k?rs"?d), a. Deserving a curse; execrable; hateful; detestable; abominable.
Let us fly this cursed place. --Milton.
This cursed quarrel be no more renewed. --Dryden.
They all cursed Noriega.
"They just told us to go home," he said. "They said the government ran out of money and we're not getting paid." Although most people grumbled and cursed Washington, a few thought the inconvenience was for the common good.
Earlier, Officer Scott Thompson testified that Miss Gabor cursed him as he assisted Kramer.
Country music singer Hank Williams Jr. thinks someone slipped him some drugs before a weekend concert in which he cursed, failed to finish a song and stumbled offstage, his publicist said.
In fact, they apologized and cursed Saddam.
Mr John Major is cursed by a worse affliction. He is unlucky.
But she insists she lashed out in self-defense after he cursed her and dragged her from her Rolls-Royce on June 14 when he spotted expired registration tags on the car.
In 1962, he testified before a U.S. Senate subcommittee that he was afraid of being poisoned, that his telephone was tapped and that his fellow judges sometimes cursed him.
From having always turned a blind eye, or cursed quietly behind the scenes, a bunch of activist institutions has burst noisely into public view.
But Mr. Wright's ventures were often cursed.
Kramer, who testified on Thursday that Miss Gabor cursed, spit and slapped him, left the stand in the morning after cross-examination by the defense.
In May, a Russian student was cursed and then beaten to death by ethnic Moldavian youths simply because he was speaking Russian in their presence.
"Next to the usurper regime ruling over occupied Palestine, you are the most cursed government in the eyes of the Iranian people. No one in the Islamic republic will hold talks with you," the radio quoted Khamenei as telling U.S. leaders.
Another group smashed a pineapple with their shoes and cursed "pineapple face," as the hated dictator was often called because of his pockmarked face.
"She told me several times about witchcraft and things she believed in like curses and things like that," said Mrs. Antillon. "She used to tell me that she felt her mother-in-law had cursed her.
According to police, the elder Brown had been arguing with another man, then cursed and threatened a police officer when the officer tried to calm him.