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 hurt [hә:t]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 伤害, 创伤, 损害

vt. 伤害, (使)伤心, 危害, 刺痛

vi. 伤害, (使)伤心, 危害, 刺痛

[法] 危害, 损害, 伤害




    hurt
    [ noun ]
    1. any physical damage to the body caused by violence or accident or fracture etc.

    2. <noun.state>
    3. psychological suffering

    4. <noun.feeling>
      the death of his wife caused him great distress
    5. feelings of mental or physical pain

    6. <noun.feeling>
    7. a damage or loss

    8. <noun.event>
    9. the act of damaging something or someone

    10. <noun.act>
    [ verb ]
    1. be the source of pain

    2. <verb.perception> ache smart
    3. give trouble or pain to

    4. <verb.body>
      This exercise will hurt your back
    5. cause emotional anguish or make miserable

    6. <verb.emotion>
      anguish pain
      It pains me to see my children not being taught well in school
    7. cause damage or affect negatively

    8. <verb.change>
      injure
      Our business was hurt by the new competition
    9. hurt the feelings of

    10. <verb.emotion>
      bruise injure offend spite wound
      She hurt me when she did not include me among her guests
      This remark really bruised my ego
    11. feel physical pain

    12. <verb.perception>
      ache suffer
      Were you hurting after the accident?
    13. feel pain or be in pain

    14. <verb.body>
      suffer
    [ adj ]
    1. suffering from physical injury especially that suffered in battle

    2. <adj.all>
      nursing his wounded arm
      ambulances...for the hurt men and women
    3. damaged inanimate objects or their value

    4. <adj.all>


    Hurt \Hurt\, n. (Mach.)
    (a) A band on a trip-hammer helve, bearing the trunnions.
    (b) A husk. See {Husk}, 2.


    Hurt \Hurt\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Hurt}; p. pr. & vb. n.
    {Hurting}.] [OE. hurten, hirten, horten, herten; prob. fr.
    OF. hurter, heurter, to knock, thrust, strike, F. heurter;
    cf. W. hyrddu to push, drive, assault, hwrdd a stroke, blow,
    push; also, a ram, the orig. sense of the verb thus perhaps
    being, to butt as a ram; cf. D. horten to push, strike, MHG.
    hurten, both prob. fr. Old French.]
    1. To cause physical pain to; to do bodily harm to; to wound
    or bruise painfully.

    The hurt lion groans within his den. --Dryden.

    2. To impar the value, usefulness, beauty, or pleasure of; to
    damage; to injure; to harm.

    Virtue may be assailed, but never hurt. --Milton.

    3. To wound the feelings of; to cause mental pain to; to
    offend in honor or self-respect; to annoy; to grieve. ``I
    am angry and hurt.'' --Thackeray.


    Hurt \Hurt\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Hurt}; p. pr. & vb. n.
    {Hurting}.] [OE. hurten, hirten, horten, herten; prob. fr.
    OF. hurter, heurter, to knock, thrust, strike, F. heurter;
    cf. W. hyrddu to push, drive, assault, hwrdd a stroke, blow,
    push; also, a ram, the orig. sense of the verb thus perhaps
    being, to butt as a ram; cf. D. horten to push, strike, MHG.
    hurten, both prob. fr. Old French.]
    1. To cause physical pain to; to do bodily harm to; to wound
    or bruise painfully.

    The hurt lion groans within his den. --Dryden.

    2. To impar the value, usefulness, beauty, or pleasure of; to
    damage; to injure; to harm.

    Virtue may be assailed, but never hurt. --Milton.

    3. To wound the feelings of; to cause mental pain to; to
    offend in honor or self-respect; to annoy; to grieve. ``I
    am angry and hurt.'' --Thackeray.

    1. But one problem that hurt their analysis when they compared the 1920s with the 1980s: They equated 1987 with 1928 instead of 1929.
    2. Robins has asked the bankruptcy court to block suits against it that might be brought by women who haven't yet discovered that the Shield hurt them.
    3. In Dhaka, Bangladesh, Chinese Premier Li Peng said Sunday that Western trade sanctions against China because of its crackdown on dissent would backfire and hurt the countries imposing the restrictions.
    4. It did not explode and no one was hurt, she said.
    5. "They didn't hurt me but at one point I was scared for my life," said the warden, Roberto Sanchez Camareno.
    6. Ballard Shipping also said it will make available $500,000 for settlements with individuals who were financially hurt by the spill.
    7. Several critics expressed fears that the program would hurt Portland's reputation.
    8. Egyptian officials said the Egyptian tour guide was hurt but the driver was not.
    9. That would hurt growth prospects for the colony. So, where will the equity market go from here?
    10. The convoys are a new wrinkle in a month-old protest by truckers boycotting Indiana truckstops, gas stations and restaurants to call attention to regulations that hurt their business.
    11. If this continues, U.S. interests could be hurt.
    12. At least five police officers and two students have been hurt in the attacks, but no U.S. personnel have been injured.
    13. The company said sales for the first quarter were "consistent" with a year ago but added that earnings have been hurt by weakness in the tire building and automotive markets it supplies.
    14. A spokeswoman for Shearson Lehman Hutton said the merged firms won't be hurt by the matter, which involves the sale of municipal bonds in the early 1980s.
    15. My knuckles were pointing downward instead of out, and I was afraid I'd hurt my arm," the inventor testifies.
    16. No one was hurt or killed in the blasts, but state authorities later imposed a curfew and banned all public assembly, including Friday prayer services, forcing tens of thousands of Moslem sabbath worshipers to stay indoors.
    17. It's expected, however, that the company, which has been hurt by a five-month-long United Steelworkers strike and a downturn in energy operations, will post a substantial loss.
    18. The diet doesn't seem to have hurt his health.
    19. Tucson Electric, Arizona's second-largest electric utility, has been hurt by its investments in real estate and financial services, and has grappled with an apparent excess construction of generating capacity.
    20. "The storm's sure to hurt the holiday traffic in, but some people can't leave either," said Susan Hill of the Reno News Bureau.
    21. "We were advised by the owner that they definitely were not friendly, they were very aggressive stock," Gregg said. "The owner said `don't try to take them alive because somebody is going to get hurt.
    22. The company's third-quarter results were hurt by weak auto markets, which account for 17% of sales, and construction markets, which account for 13%, he said.
    23. Humphrey wouldn't hurt anyone." In suburban Miami, Broward County commissioners have reclassified the potbellied pig as an exotic pet.
    24. Recent increases in short-term interest rates could hurt homebuyers and homeowners whose monthly payments are based on variable-rate mortgages.
    25. By most reports, it seems that the corn crop has been hurt the most in the Southeast.
    26. He scheduled another hearing for Wednesday when, the judge said, "We'll let it all hang out." Moody's attorneys argued that the intense publicity over the bombs probe has hurt Moody's reputation.
    27. One large trading adviser tells how position limits hurt his clients in the 1988 bull market in grains and soybeans. The firm bought the maximum amount of soybean futures, 2,400 contracts, in December 1987.
    28. Demand has been hurt by the Persian Gulf war, which is interfering with Middle East purchases, and by the Soviet Union's economic and political problems, analysts said.
    29. U.S. drug companies' profits were hurt during much of the early 1980s because the strong dollar reduced the dollar amount of sales even though unit-sales growth remained brisk in foreign markets.
    30. Some foreign markets have been hurt more than others in the dollar translation.
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