gripe / graɪp /

⚽高中词汇抱怨怨气怨言牢骚

gripe3 个定义

v. 无主动词 verb

griped, grip·ing.

  1. Informal. to complain naggingly or constantly; grumble.
  2. to suffer pain in the bowels.
  3. Nautical. to tend to come into the wind; to be ardent.
v. 有主动词 verb

griped, grip·ing.

  1. Informal. to annoy or irritate: His tone of voice gripes me.
  2. to produce pain in as if by constriction.
  3. to distress, afflict, or oppress: poverty that gripes and pinches us.
n. 名词 noun
  1. Informal. a nagging complaint.
  2. Usually gripes. Pathology. an intermittent spasmodic pain in the bowels.
  3. something that grips or clutches; a claw or grip.

gripe 近义词

n. 名词 noun

complaint

n. 名词 noun

strong hold

v. 动词 verb

complain

v. 动词 verb

pain, annoy

更多gripe例句

  1. The caveats above apply, but other than a few minor gripes that I mention above, I cannot fault this laptop.
  2. Fellow critics, like Vulture’s Kathryn VanArendonk and Decider’s Meghan O’Keefe, have posited that Ted Lasso’s weekly release could be to blame for the spike in these gripes.
  3. My only small gripe with the rear controls is that they’re not visible to the user while the mic is in use, so unless you’ve memorized each switch’s location, you need to pivot the mic or physically move your body to gain access.
  4. Attacked by sadistic rustics with a social media gripe, the owner of the Facebook-like ConFab tells Pickett that if he dies in the wilderness at least “it’ll go viral.”
  5. It would be ludicrous to gripe about Louis-Dreyfus winning again for her work in Veep.
  6. My big gripe with the old TV shows was their reliance on predictable formulas.
  7. Later, another senior NCO chased me down the hall to gripe about how my pants met my boots.
  8. Well, I have a gripe with the pope, was a bit disgusted, and was struck by his radical views.
  9. The gripe is much older than the bloggers and tweeters who are its latest targets.
  10. Peer Khan uttered the fatal words, and Ghuffoor Khan wrestled out his last agony under my never-failing gripe.
  11. The pincers gripe, the pliers handle; the one is like the closed hand, the other like the fingers.
  12. It was safe enough for a high-ranking labman to gripe about Security—in fact, it was more or less expected.
  13. What has posterity done for us / That we, lest they their rights should lose, / Should trust our necks to gripe of noose?
  14. It is weaker than Barbadoes or even hepatic aloes, and is more apt to gripe, &c., than the latter.