damned 的 3 个定义
superlative damned·est, damnd·est.
- condemned or doomed, especially to eternal punishment: the wailing of damned souls.
 - detestable; loathsome: Get that damned dog out of here!
 - complete; absolute; utter: a damned nuisance; a damned fool.
 - Informal. extraordinary; amazing: It was the damnedest thing I'd ever seen.
 
- the damned, those condemned to suffer eternal punishment.
 
- extremely; very; absolutely: a damned good singer; too damned lazy.
 
damned 近义词
hateful, unwelcome
更多damned例句
- Conformity with the system, for Bronson, is a form of spiritual death that leaves you “unsaved, unforgiven, damned.”
 - It was a riot, organized and planned in advance, and aided by people in charge of the government so they could stay in power — pesky electoral outcomes be damned.
 - Of course, there will always be those marketers whose first response in any crisis is to steer ads clear of news — media owners be damned.
 - He is determined to map whole brains, exorbitant exabyte-scale storage be damned.
 - Corporations maximize profits for shareholders—workers, communities, and the environment be damned.
 - They were going to tell their story, consequences be damned.
 - Lady Edith is so sad that her sadness nearly set the whole damned house on fire.
 - But he had already begun to start speaking his truth, consequences be damned.
 - Who has the courage to do the right thing—money from special interest groups be damned?
 - But the government is planning to throw her in jail—no court date, son be damned.
 - I thought at the moment it was some of his damned impertinence, but concluded that he had something on his mind.
 - That Hicks—the damned —— —— —— he come t' Baker's as they hooked up t' leave the Spring.
 - We were in a so-called trench on the edge of a wood—a damned rotten place to be, and we got hell.
 - Charles Martel, on the contrary, was damned—body and soul—for having rewarded his captains by giving them abbeys.
 - That's why he broke the contract with the Amalgamated, and hired the damned Pinkertons two months before, when all was peace.