单词 | parasite |
释义 | par·a·site I. 1. a. b. 2. a. b. 3. < resourceful public enemies, parasites on the free-press privilege, who thrive on the profits derived from the exploitation of current pornographic materials — U.S. House of Repr. Report > < the great city is a parasite on the country — François Bondy > < foiled at one market, they move on to another … parasites on society, until justice catches up with them — Irish Digest > < the young girl is still left incapable of making a living; she can only vegetate as a parasite in her father's home — H.M.Parshley > < new friends who had faith in her ideas, as well as new parasites who hoped to profit by them — Havelock Ellis > 4. 5. Synonyms: < the ones who evade the earth and live upon the others in some way they have devised. They are the parasites, and they are the despised — Pearl Buck > < a court society ridden with parasites > < as our present society disintegrates, this démodé figure will become clearer; the Bohemian, the outsider, the parasite, the rat — one of those figures which have at present no function either in a warring or peaceful world — E.M.Forster > < the poorer citizens were little more than parasites, fed with free state bread, amused by free state shows — John Buchan > sycophant applies to one that clings to a person of wealth, power, or influence and wins or tries to win his favor by fawning, flattery, or adulation < a man who rose in this world because he curried favor, a sycophant — Kenneth Roberts > < sycophants who kept him from wholesome contact with reality, who played upon his overweening conceit and confirmed him in his persecutional manias — H.A.Overstreet > favorite applies to a close associate or intimate of a king or noble who is unduly favored by him, especially with power < huge grants of land to court favorites — W.C.Ford > < reduced to the ranks every officer who had a good record and appointed scoundrelly favorites of his own in their places — Robert Graves > < Pharaoh, his family and his favorites — J.E.M.White > toady, often interchangeable with sycophant, stresses more the servility and snobbery of the social climber < he preens himself in the velvet coat, he spies out the land and sees that the Dowager is “the one”; he becomes the perfect toady — Stevie Smith > < this induced a sharp distaste for the flagrant political plunder, the obscene scramble for the loaves and fishes by the spoilsmen and their toadies — Sidney Warren > lickspit and lickspittle and bootlick and bootlicker are interchangeable in common speech with sycophant and toady, implying, however, even stronger contemptibleness < characterized those who disagreed as lickspittles and toadies of official whiggery — Asahel Bush > < a lickspittle humility that went beyond flattery — Alan Moorehead > < bootlicks hanging around the mayor's office > < its principal characters were stupid and bemused commanders, or vicious bootlickers tainted with homosexuality — Horace Sutton > hanger-on applies to anyone who is regarded, usually contemptuously, as adhering to or depending unduly on another especially for favors < there were the hangers-on who might be called domestics by inheritance — T.R.Ybarra > < a hanger-on at Court, waiting for the preferment that somehow eluded him — Times Literary Supplement > < those rather hangers-on than friends, whom he treated with the cynical contempt that they deserved — Robert Graves > leech stresses the persistence of clinging to or bleeding another for one's own advantage < hatred for the freeloader or deadbeat. Yet, as a student of humanity, he tolerated these leeches — H.E.Maule & M.H.Cane > < a leech living off his family and friends > sponge or sponger stress a parasitic laziness, dependence, and indifference to the discomforts caused and usually a certain pettiness and constant regard for opportunities to cadge < a sponge who developed the habit of dropping in for a visit just before mealtimes > < a girl whose disappointment with the world has made her the prey of an unsuccessful crook and sponger — Times Literary Supplement > II. intransitive verb transitive verb |
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