forsake / fɔrˈseɪk /

⚽高中词汇摒弃抛弃弃之不顾弃绝

forsake 的定义

v. 有主动词 verb

for·sook [fawr-sook], /fɔrˈsʊk/, for·sak·en, for·sak·ing.

  1. to quit or leave entirely; abandon; desert: She has forsaken her country for an island in the South Pacific.
  2. to give up or renounce.

forsake 近义词

v. 动词 verb

abandon, turn one's back on

更多forsake例句

  1. Houston, like TCU, was one of the forsaken former SWC teams that didn’t make the cut for the Big 12 when it was created.
  2. One of you may have to forsake the toaster oven you’ve enjoyed for the past decade in favor of the newer, smaller model your future roommate owns.
  3. To forsake curiosity and passion for fear of facing risk and adversity is to give up on life itself.
  4. Every hour, the anthem is played, followed by Orthodox priests intoning prayers and beseeching God not to forsake Ukraine.
  5. But will he be willing to forsake his lucrative gig at Fox News to grind it out on the campaign trail?
  6. Muhammad assumed this risk because he refused to forsake any opportunity for peace.
  7. The Kremlin will have little choice but to forsake its mega-projects.
  8. He understood that to be leisurely is to forsake possibilities, even lives.
  9. From it I learned that, if I would gain heaven, I must forsake sin and live a pure life.
  10. His many failures caused his friends to forsake him and he was put in prison for not paying his debts.
  11. May he hear your prayers, and be reconciled unto you, and never forsake you in the evil time.
  12. As favour and riches forsake a man, we discover in him the foolishness they concealed, and which no one perceived before.
  13. He hasn't the nerve to forsake his native heath and roam the wide world, a free and independent gentleman.