lavish 的 2 个定义
- expended, bestowed, or occurring in profusion: lavish spending.
- using or giving in great amounts; prodigal: lavish of his time; lavish of affection.
- to expend or give in great amounts or without limit: to lavish gifts on a person.
lavish 近义词
profuse; splendid
lavish 的近义词 43 个
- bountiful
- effusive
- excessive
- extravagant
- exuberant
- generous
- gorgeous
- grand
- lush
- luxurious
- opulent
- plush
- posh
- profligate
- ritzy
- sumptuous
- swanky
- wasteful
- exaggerated
- free
- abundant
- copious
- first-class
- immoderate
- impressive
- improvident
- inordinate
- intemperate
- liberal
- luxuriant
- munificent
- openhanded
- plentiful
- prodigal
- profusive
- prolific
- riotous
- thriftless
- unreasonable
- unrestrained
- unsparing
- unstinging
- wild
lavish 的反义词 20 个
pamper, shower
更多lavish例句
- Attacking a celebrity will almost always produce more attention than lavishing praise on them.
- The publication flourished in an era of lavish entertaining and grew from 16 pages in its earliest editions to 300 pages at its peak in the 1980s.
- Obviously, if Kim had revealed that she and her family became sick right after returning from her vacation, all hell would have broken loose, the immediate assumption that she must have been exposed while on the lavish trip.
- Nathan Finkel was on the grounds of his lavish, 16,313-square-foot South Florida mansion Saturday morning when strangers arrived at his gate, demanding to come inside to set up for their wedding.
- In 2016, the Pennsylvania Office of Attorney General opened a new investigation into the charity’s board for apparently violating the 2013 agreement, along with lavish travel, board infighting and new allegations of conflicts of interest.
- Of course, it could be hard to see that logic through all the lavish weirdness of the proposal.
- Lobbyists use these trips to lavish bounty on Congressmen, far from prying eyes.
- The Kardashians paid more than $400,000 to rent out the lavish grounds.
- The train is lavish in a rich cream color and measures 11.8 feet.
- The lavish parties were part of his cover, and after his arrest by the Egyptians he earned the nickname “the Champagne Spy.”
- In New York he was much impressed with the "elegant country seats," with the bountiful hospitality, and the lavish way of living.
- Little patches may be seen near their huts, on which they lavish their attention and care.
- The critics were fulsome in their praise and the public was lavish with its plaudits, but I was abjectly miserable.
- The place lies high and in the open, and lacks the lavish shade of the more protected New England villages.
- Dazzled by the more lavish gifts, she looked listlessly and disdainfully at bodkins, three for twopence.