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have pity

/pit-ee/US // ˈpɪt i //UK // (ˈpɪtɪ) //

可怜可怜我吧,可怜可怜我们吧,怜悯,可怜可怜你吧

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1

    plural pit·ies.

    • : sympathetic or kindly sorrow evoked by the suffering, distress, or misfortune of another, often leading one to give relief or aid or to show mercy: to feel pity for a starving child.
    • : a cause or reason for pity, sorrow, or regret: What a pity you could not go!
adj.形容词 adjective
  1. 1
    • : motivated by a sense of pity or sympathy for others or for oneself: It seems he got the pity vote because of his personality, but his singing just wasn’t that great.
v.有主动词 verb
  1. 1

    pit·ied, pit·y·ing.

    • : to feel pity or compassion for; be sorry for; commiserate with.
v.无主动词 verb
  1. 1

    pit·ied, pit·y·ing.

    • : to have compassion; feel pity.

Synonyms & Antonyms

as inrelent
Synonyms
acquiesce默许,默认,认同,认可capitulate俯首称臣,屈服,投降cave in在地陷come around来了,醒来,醒来吧,回归comply遵守,遵从,遵守规定,符合规定ease off纾解,纾缓,缓和,缓解give in让步,让步于,放弃,放弃吧give up放弃,舍弃,放弃吧,罢休let go放手,松手,放手吧,放开quit退出,辞职,戒掉relax放松,松弛,放轻松,放松心情slacken弛缓,松懈,松弛,弛缓的soften变得柔和,变得柔软,变得柔和了,变得柔和起来subside减退,消退,减弱,沉降drop下降,跌落,掉落,滴ease缓解,减轻,舒适度,舒适ebb退潮,减压,退潮期,减震fall坠落,跌倒,跌落,摔倒fold折叠,褶皱,折,折痕forbear忍受,隐忍,忍受者,忍受着melt融化,熔化,融化了,熔炼moderate温和的,温和,温文尔雅,温顺的slow缓慢,慢,缓慢的,缓wane衰败,衰落,衰微,衰弱weaken削弱,弱化,减弱,削弱了yield产量,屈服,收益,收益率be merciful行善吧,行善,行仁术,行善积德change one's mind回心转意,改变主意,变卦,回心转意了cool it冷却它,凉拌,冷静,冷静下来cry uncle叔叔的哭声,哭泣的叔叔,叔叔哭了,叔叔的哭泣声die away消亡,消逝,消亡了,逝去ease up on缓和,缓和一下,放宽,和缓give quarter赠送季度,季度支付,季度,赠送季度卡give some slack松动一下,松口气,松懈一下,松懈一些give way让路,让位,让步,让道go along with随同,顺着,顺应,跟随go easy on从容不迫,从容应对,从容对待,从容不迫的have mercy行行好吧,怜悯吧,饶恕吧,可怜可怜我吧lay back躺下,躺下来,躺下了,躺着let it happen顺其自然,顺其自然吧,任其自然lighten up减轻负担,淡化,减轻,减轻压力mellow out醇化,醇化了,醇厚,醇化了的say uncle叔叔说,叔父说,舅舅说,伯父说show mercy怜悯,慈悲为怀,怜悯吧,怜悯之心

Examples

  • I will, however, avoid the chance to wallow in self-pity because that’s not what this op-ed is about.

  • The Steelers might have pitied themselves a bit — and with reason.

  • The one time our culture is finally represented in the mainstream media, he said, it’s shown as “some kind of pity party needed for the main character to become less superficial.”

  • A vaunted agency that was once the global gold standard of public health has, with breathtaking speed, become a target of anger, scorn and even pity.

  • Nope, though readers may occasionally see the tiniest justifiable pity-party because the backdrop of this book is about parenting a parent, which everybody knows is hard.

  • Lady Rose is also rather subdued in the premiere, which is a pity.

  • It is not a pity party when you can stand up and say, “I am,” to be counted, reaffirmed, human.

  • This is not a woman who wants pity, nor does she want money, or even an apology from Cosby.

  • Well, the dwarfs took pity on him and gave him the coffin, and the prince had it carried to his castle.

  • Yet even as the Germans wallowed in bitter self-pity, another defeated superpower underwent a dramatic turnaround.

  • When she did this, and drooped the corners of her mouth, she was very engaging, and the young man tingled all over with pity.

  • If wealth were always thus employed, it were a pity that great fortunes are not more numerous.

  • A girl was moved to pity by a picture of a lamb caught in a thicket, and tried to lift the branch that lay across the animal.

  • He come July six, for don't you mind how they called him Cevery out of pity and generosity for the Spayniards?

  • If he would take her a little more seriously—it 's an immense pity he married her because she was silly!