| 释义 | loath/ləʊθ /(also loth) adjective [predicative, with infinitive]Reluctant; unwilling: I was loath to leave...It made victims reluctant to prosecute, and juries loath to convict.And among other things the poor pigeons, I perceive, were loth to leave their houses, but hovered about the balconies till they were some of them burned and fell down.The ship now needs to be sold, but I would be loth to see it go through the courts as in that case other parties would benefit - and not the men.
 Synonyms reluctant, unwilling, disinclined, ill-disposed, not in the mood; hesitant; against, averse, opposed, resistant, hostile, antagonistic; resisting UsageAlthough different in meaning, loath and loathe are often confused. Loath is an adjective (also spelled loth) meaning ‘reluctant or unwilling’, as in I was loath to leave, whereas loathe is a verb meaning ‘feel intense dislike or disgust for’, as in she loathed him on sight.DerivativesOriginOld English lāth 'hostile, spiteful', of Germanic origin; related to Dutch leed, German Leid 'sorrow'.Rhymesboth, growth, oath, quoth, sloth, Thoth, troth |