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no worries

/wur-ee, wuhr-ee/US // ˈwɜr i, ˈwʌr i //UK // (ˈwʌrɪ) //

无忧无虑,无后顾之忧,无忧,不用担心

Related Words

Definitions

v.无主动词 verb
  1. 1

    wor·ried, wor·ry·ing.

    • : to torment oneself with or suffer from disturbing thoughts; fret.
    • : to move with effort: an old car worrying uphill.
v.有主动词 verb
  1. 1

    wor·ried, wor·ry·ing.

    • : to torment with cares, anxieties, etc.; trouble; plague.
    • : to seize, especially by the throat, with the teeth and shake or mangle, as one animal does another.
    • : to harass by repeated biting, snapping, etc.
n.名词 noun
  1. 1

    plural wor·ries.

    • : a worried condition or feeling; uneasiness or anxiety.
    • : a cause of uneasiness or anxiety; trouble.
    • : the act of worrying.
    • : Fox Hunting. the action of the hounds in tearing to pieces the carcass of a fox.
  1. 1
    • : worry along / through Informal. to progress or succeed by constant effort, despite difficulty: to worry through an intolerable situation.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • I have no worries about slinging it around camp or strapping it to the roof rack if space is tight in the car.

  • It helps that EU lawmakers have already agreed to a giant stimulus spending package for the trading bloc, so that worry is off the table.

  • McMansions are back, in a big way, given the trend toward remote work — and thus the need for office space at home, and no worries about long commutes.

  • The worry for influencers is whether their audiences would follow them over to Triller if they switched.

  • Then I could cheerfully traipse from my backyard to a neighbor’s driveway and then on to a dark corner booth somewhere with no worries.

  • Still, I worry that a simple traffic stop could have tragic consequences.

  • And the authorities also worry that the December fires are just the beginning.

  • But in the days ahead he, his brother, and the others will be back in the street while their families worry at home.

  • I wish this was the last time I had to worry about hunger and bombs.

  • This is a well-documented phenomenon which does not worry specialists.

  • In sheer nervousness, Hilda also dropped to her knees on the hearthrug, and began to worry the fire with the poker.

  • His only worry at the time lay in the dark sky above and the blue-white stabs of lightning that promised an electrical storm.

  • No, there was nothing to worry about as long as that relentless hunter of criminals known as the Black Hood kept off their tail.

  • I should worry if Burd has a dozen maiden aunts,” observed Amy scornfully, “and they all knitted him red wristlets!

  • Matt began to appreciate the difficulties ahead of him and to worry a little about the outcome.