sacrifice
柯林斯词典
1. V-T To sacrifice an animal or person means to kill them in a special religious ceremony as an offering to a god. 獻祭
The priest sacrificed a chicken. 牧師獻祭了一衹雞。
2. N-COUNT Sacrifice is also a noun. 祭品
...animal sacrifices to the gods. …獻給衆神的動物祭品。
3. V-T If you sacrifice something that is valuable or important, you give it up, usually to obtain something else for yourself or for other people. 捨棄; 犧牲
She sacrificed family life to her career. 她爲了她的事業犧牲了家庭生活。
Kitty Aldridge has sacrificed all for her first film. 姬蒂•奧爾德裡奇爲了她的第一部電影犧牲了一切。
4. N-VAR Sacrifice is also a noun. 捨棄; 犧牲
She made many sacrifices to get Anita a good education. 爲了讓安尼塔受到良好教育,她做出了很多犧牲。
返回 sacrifice
sacrifice /ˈsækrɪˌfaɪs/ (sacrificing,sacrificed,sacrifices)
剑桥词典
- She's had to sacrifice a lot for that relationship .
- He's the world's best tennis player but he's sacrificed everything else in his life for it.
- He has sacrificed his personal life for the sake of celebrity .
- Many women sacrifice their own ambitions to put their family first.
- It's the only bit of free time I get in the week and I'm not prepared to sacrifice it.
sacrifice verb (GIVE UP)
[ 及物動詞:後麪接賓語的動詞 ]to give up something that is valuable to you in order to help another person
犧牲;獻出
Many women sacrifice interesting careers for their families . 許多女性爲了家庭犧牲了自己感興趣的工作。
例句
sacrifice verb (KILL)
[ 不及物動詞:後麪不接賓語的動詞 or 及物動詞:後麪接賓語的動詞 ]to kill an animal or a person and offer them to a god or gods
獻祭;以(人或動物)爲祭品