lazy
lazy 英 [ˈleɪzi] 美 [ˈlezi]
adj. 懒惰的;懒洋洋的;
比较级:lazier 最高级:laziest
- While lazy actually means being averse to work or avoiding it, it can also be used to describe something slow-moving or unenergetic, like when you stroll down the garden path with a lazy gait, not in a hurry to get anywhere.
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- adj. 懒惰的;懒洋洋的;
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1. He was not stupid, just lazy.
他不笨,只是懒。
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2. I was feeling too lazy to go out.
我当时懒得动,不愿意外出。
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3. a lazy piece of work
粗制滥造的作品
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4. We spent a lazy day on the beach.
我们在海滩上懒洋洋地度过了一天。
- lazy (adj.) 1540s, laysy, of persons, "averse to labor, action, or effort," a word of unknown origin. In 19c. thought to be from lay (v.) as tipsy from tip. Skeat is responsible for the prevailing modern view that it probably comes from Low German, from a source such as Middle Low German laisch "weak, feeble, tired," modern Low German läösig, early modern Dutch leuzig, all of which may go back to the PIE root *(s)leg- "slack." According to Weekley, the -z- sound disqualifies a connection with French lassé "tired" or German lassig "lazy, weary, tired." A supposed dialectal meaning "naught, bad," if it is the original sense, may tie the word to Old Norse lasenn "dilapidated," lasmøyrr "decrepit, fragile," root of Icelandic las-furða "ailing," las-leiki "ailment."
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