fret
fret 英 [fret] 美 [frɛt]
vt. 使烦恼;焦急;使磨损 vi. 烦恼;焦急;磨损 n. 烦躁;焦急;磨损
进行时:fretting 过去式:fretted 过去分词:fretted 第三人称单数:frets 名词复数:frets
- When you fret, you worry so much about something that it eats away at you. Many people fret about taking standardized tests, but really, they're nothing to sweat.
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- vt. 使烦恼;焦急;使磨损
- vi. 烦恼;焦急;磨损
- n. 烦躁;焦急;磨损
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1. Doubts began to fret his mind.
疑惑使他烦躁不安。
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2. If it’s out of your control, why fret about it?
如果某件事你控制不了,那为什么还要为它而烦恼呢?
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3. As she spoke we could see that she was in a fret.
她讲话时, 我们看得出她很烦躁。
- fret (n.1) "ornamental interlaced pattern," late 14c., from Old French frete "interlaced work, trellis work," probably from Frankish *fetur or another Germanic source (cognates: Old English fetor, Old High German feggara "a fetter, shackle") perhaps from the notion of "decorative anklet," or of materials "bound" together.
- fret (n.2) "ridge on the fingerboard of a guitar," c. 1500, of unknown origin, possibly from another sense of Old French frete "ring, ferule." Compare Middle English fret "a tie or lace" (early 14c.), freten (v.) "to bind, fasten" (mid-14c.).
- fret (v.) Old English fretan "devour, feed upon, consume," from Proto-Germanic compound *fra-etan "to eat up," from *fra- "completely" (from PIE root *per- (1) "forward," hence "through") + *etan "to eat" (from PIE root *ed- "to eat"). Cognates include Dutch vreten, Old High German frezzan, German fressen, Gothic fraitan.
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