blush
blush 英 [blʌʃ] 美 [blʌʃ]
v. 脸红;羞愧 n. 脸红;羞愧
进行时:blushing 过去式:blushed 过去分词:blushed 第三人称单数:blushes 名词复数:blushes
- When you blush, you turn red because you are embarrassed. And, oddly enough, women wear the make-up variety of blush to add color to their cheeks — not to appear embarrassed but to appear attractive.
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- v. 脸红;羞愧
- n. 脸红;羞愧
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1. to blush with embarrassment, to blush with shame
尴尬╱羞愧得面颊绯红
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2. She blushed furiously at the memory of the conversation.
她一想起那次谈话就气得满脸通红。
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3. He blushed scarlet at the thought.
他想起那事便面红耳赤。
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4. I blush to admit it, but I quite like her music.
不好意思,但我得承认我很喜欢她的音乐。
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5. She felt a warm blush rise to her cheeks.
她感到双颊热辣辣的。
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6. He turned away to hide his blushes.
他转过身去,不让人看见他脸红。
- blush (n.) mid-14c., "a look, a glance" (sense preserved in at first blush "at first glance"), also "a gleam, a gleaming" (late 14c.), from blush (v.). As "a reddening of the face" from 1590s. Meaning "a rosy color" is also from 1590s.
- blush (v.) late 14c., bluschen, blischen, "to shine brightly; to look, gaze, stare," probably from Old English blyscan "blush, become red, glow" (glossing Latin rutilare), akin to blyse "torch," from Proto-Germanic *blisk- "to shine, burn," which also yielded words in Low German (Dutch blozen "to blush") and Scandinavian (Danish blusse "to blaze; to blush"); ultimately from PIE *bhel-(1) "to shine, flash, burn."
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