| 释义 |
ran·cour British English, rancor American English /ˈræŋkə $ -ər/ noun [uncountable] formalHATE a feeling of hatred and anger towards someone you cannot forgive because they harmed you in the past 深仇,积怨 → resentmentwithout rancour He spoke openly about the war without a trace of rancour. 他不带丝毫怨恨地坦然谈论这场战争。Examples from the Corpusrancour• You could hardly say they had been reconciled, but there seemed no rancour between them.• In such an atmosphere of rancour and distrust it was hardly surprising that the magazine never developed a proper editorial identity.• Gang leaders fled the scene, and all traces of rancour and suspicion vanished with them.• Often exasperating to colleagues, he was always courteous and never bore personal rancour.• This is ridiculously expensive, and the cause of much political rancour.• He observed with simmering rancour as she began to tell Malengin about her life in the poisoner's house in Scaraby.• But the mental process allows us to filter our response to avoid undue rancour.ran·cour nounChineseSyllable towards and feeling Corpus you someone of hatred anger a |