We agonized for hours about which wallpaper to buy. 对买哪种壁纸, 我们伤了几小时的脑筋.
Burst agonized and clear! 如此痛切而清晰!
Martin bent over him, agonized to see how swollen his face was. 马丁俯下身子,看到他的脸这样肿,非常难过。
agonized
[ adj ] expressing pain or agony <adj.all> agonized screams
Agonize \Ag"o*nize\, v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Agonized}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Agonizing}.] [F. agoniser, LL. agonizare, fr. Gr. ?. See {Agony}.] 1. To writhe with agony; to suffer violent anguish.
To smart and agonize at every pore. --Pope.
2. To struggle; to wrestle; to strive desperately.
They're trying to say something very personal and very agonized." One strong theme that has emerged in the war-influenced art is the enduring legacy of the civilizations that prospered along the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers.
Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher's government agonized over the decision, fearful of repeating the fiasco that ended in 1986 when it wrote off a dud British spy plane called the Nimrod.
"For instance, I remember how we agonized before calling a girl on the phone.
Meanwhile, the Legislature, which agonized over budget deficits through most of the spring, must still cut or raise $500 million in a $12.3 billion budget this year, because revenues are falling short again.
And portfolio managers agonized over why they didn't see the crash coming.
His book that year, "The Crisis of Marxism," was an often agonized analysis of failures he perceived in contemporary Marxist philosophy.
But no one suffered more than our father, who agonized over evicting his son.