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unenduring

/en-door-ing, -dyoor-/US // ɛnˈdʊər ɪŋ, -ˈdyʊər- //UK // (ɪnˈdjʊərɪŋ) //

不持久,不持久的,不长的时间,不持久性

Related Words

Definitions

adj.形容词 adjective
  1. 1
    • : lasting; permanent: a poet of enduring greatness.
    • : patient; long-suffering.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • Despite enduring headaches, a fever and shortness of breath, Day kept the paper going by working from home.

  • Then Warnock suddenly opened a gigantic, enduring lead of over five points that mirrored Ossoff’s sprint.

  • “Purchases that help to foster our social relationships—those are the purchases that are most likely to bring us longer-lasting, more enduring happiness,” Kumar says.

  • No one has quantified the loss of productivity from this, but it’s significant and enduring.

  • It enhances the feeling of visiting the past, and thereby a more enduring appreciation for it.

  • But the enduring response—stop the world, I want to get off—is the same.

  • But several of these words and phrases do manage to secure an enduring place in the English language.

  • Statistics are one thing, enduring the jailhouse ordeal another.

  • Cruising the Caribbean, enjoying beaches... Enduring Persecution as an American Christian sounds horrible.

  • Call it tragic, call it comic, or call it both: The most enduring legacy of Viagra might be erectile dysfunction jokes.

  • So intelligent were her methods that she doubtless had great influence in making the memory of his art enduring.

  • Uriah said it would dishonour him to seek ease and pleasure at home while other soldiers were enduring hardship at the front.

  • For Isabel Otis the genius loci had a more powerful and enduring magnetism than any man or woman she had ever known.

  • Her mother pressed the coveted treasure to her bosom with maternal love, more calm, and deep, and enduring.

  • Sebastopol was evacuated last night after enduring, for three days, an infernal fire of shot and shell.