drudge 英 [drʌdʒ]   美 [drʌdʒ]

drudge

drudge  英 [drʌdʒ] 美 [drʌdʒ]

vi. 做苦工,干苦力  vt. 强迫做苦工  n. 做苦工的人 

进行时:drudging  过去式:drudged  过去分词:drudged  第三人称单数:drudges  名词复数:drudges 

I wouldn't wish to have my son drudge all his life. 我可不愿让我儿子终身做苦工。
One day after Newsweek killed a story about a new scandal in the Clinton White House, The drudge Report broke the Monica Lewinsky story anyway. 在新闻周刊毙掉了一篇关于美国前总统克林顿白宫性丑闻的报道后一天,Drudge的新闻网站却不顾一切地对此进行了报道。

  • A drudge is someone who works very hard, especially at a job that is boring. To drudge is to work hard.
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  • vi. 做苦工,干苦力
  • vt. 强迫做苦工
  • n. 做苦工的人
  • 1. I wouldn't wish to have my son drudge all his life.

    我可不愿让我儿子终身做苦工。

  • 2. One day after Newsweek killed a story about a new scandal in the Clinton White House, The drudge Report broke the Monica Lewinsky story anyway.

    在新闻周刊毙掉了一篇关于美国前总统克林顿白宫性丑闻的报道后一天,Drudge的新闻网站却不顾一切地对此进行了报道。

  • 3. For her part, Eliza later claimed that she had been forced to work as a drudge around the Aborigines' camp, gathering firewood and digging up roots.

    至于爱丽莎,她后来说,自己被迫在土著人的各个营地做苦工,捡柴火,挖树根。

  • drudge (n.) late 15c., "one employed in mean, servile, or distasteful work," missing in Old English and Middle English, unless it is represented by Middle English druggen "do menial or monotonous work; druggunge, mid-13c., which are perhaps from Old English dreogan "to work, suffer, endure." The verb is from 1540s. Related: Drudged; drudging. The surname is from 13c., probably from Old French dragie "a mixture of grains sown together," thus, a grower of this crop.
drudge / drʌdʒ ; NAmE drʌdʒ / noun a person who has to do long hard boring jobs 苦工;做繁重无聊工作的人 drudge drudges drudged drudging drudge / drʌdʒ ; NAmE drʌdʒ /
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