fortune 的 3 个定义
- position in life as determined by wealth: to make one's fortune.
- wealth or riches: to lose a small fortune in bad investments.
- great wealth; ample stock of money, property, and the like: to be worth a fortune.
- (9)
for·tuned, for·tun·ing.
- Archaic. to endow with a fortune.
for·tuned, for·tun·ing.
- Archaic. to chance or happen; come by chance.
fortune 近义词
wealth, possessions
fate, lot in life
fortune 的近义词 38 个
- moirai
- accident
- break
- certainty
- chance
- circumstances
- contingency
- destiny
- doom
- expectation
- experience
- fluke
- fortuity
- hazard
- history
- karma
- kismet
- life
- luck
- luckiness
- portion
- providence
- star
- success
- fifty-fifty
- fighting chance
- fortunateness
- good break
- lucked into
- lucked out
- lucky break
- lucky hit
- roll of the dice
- run of luck
- streak of luck
- way the ball bounces
- way the cookie crumbles
- wheel of fortune
fortune 的反义词 8 个
更多fortune例句
- They are speeding up trading on financial markets, making and losing fortunes in micro-seconds.
- Patrick Howell O’Neill profiles Israeli spyware company NSO, which has quietly built up its fortune by helping governments around the world snoop on people.
- Today’s cannabis industry is a constantly shifting landscape of legal developments, policy changes, company fortunes, and product innovations.
- Unlike other rich women of her time, Scripps worked for her fortune instead of marrying or inheriting it, McClain said.
- Backlinks are one way to get this boost without spending a fortune.
- The building used to be an all-girls school, and when it was initially purchased by Fortune it was dilapidated.
- Stanley Richards, Senior Vice President of the Fortune Society, gave a tour along with a few residents.
- That good fortune meant CNN had the only TV correspondent on the scene.
- Hitchcock had the historical good fortune to have worked from silent films through television.
- “I suppose she'll want a fortune as well,” he says, looking at me as if I were Liv Ullmann's agent.
- Sleek finds it far harder work than fortune-making; but he pursues his Will-o'-the-Wisp with untiring energy.
- The fortune was proving quite as large as he had expected, and not even an inquest had been held upon the dead man.
- But "the cards never forgive," and as a rule Dame Fortune is relentless to the reckless player.
- Aristide always regarded the fortune of the moment as if it would last forever.
- The fact that her fortune was vaguely threatened did not cause her anxiety: she scarcely realized it.