faineant
- adj. 無(wú)所事事的;懶惰的
- n. 無(wú)所事事者;懶惰者
英文詞源
- faineant (adj.)
- 1855; earlier as a noun (1610s); from French fainéant (16c.) "do-nothing," from fait, third person singular of faire "to do" (from Latin facere "to make, do;" see factitious) + néant "nothing" (compare dolce far niente). According to OED this is a French folk-etymology alteration of Old French faignant (14c.), present participle of faindre "to feign" (see feign). Applied in French to the late Merovingian kings, puppets in the hands of the palace mayors. Related: Faineance "the habit of doing nothing."
雙語(yǔ)例句
- 1. Finally. My kin and neighbour people still admitted me . They are faineant.
- 最后. 我的親戚和鄰居們還是承認(rèn)了我.
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- 2. The whats after junior high school graduates were an examination of on, socially faineant two years.
- 初中畢業(yè)后什么都沒(méi)考上, 在社會(huì)上無(wú)所事事了兩年.
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- 3. Make not quite from first look, excited unceasingly, gradually excessive to now faineant , loaf about everywhere.
- 從最初的眼不夠使, 激動(dòng)不已, 逐漸過(guò)度到現(xiàn)在的無(wú)所事事, 四處游蕩.
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