Hermit Meaning in English
word
ˈhɝmət
HUR-mit
hˈɜːmɪt
HUR-mit
释义
A hermit is a person who lives alone, away from other people, usually for religious reasons or to have a quiet life.
用法与细微差别
'Hermit' is usually formal or literary. It strongly suggests living in isolation by choice, unlike 'loner' (which is more casual and may be involuntary). Common phrases are 'live like a hermit' and 'hermit crab' (a different meaning, a sea animal).
Spanish: ermitañoPortuguese (BR): ermitãoPortuguese (PT): eremitaChinese (Simplified): 隐士Chinese (Traditional): 隱士Hindi: संन्यासी - एकांतवासीArabic: ناسكBengali: সন্ন্যাসী - একাকী বসবাসকারীRussian: отшельникJapanese: 隠者 - 世捨て人Vietnamese: ẩn sĩ - ẩn cưKorean: 은둔자 - 은자Turkish: münzevi - keşişUrdu: گوشہ نشین - عزلت نشینIndonesian: pertapa - penyendiri
例句
The hermit lives in a small cabin in the woods.
basic
Many years ago, the hermit left the city behind.
basic
A hermit often enjoys a quiet and peaceful life.
basic
He lives like a hermit, barely talking to anyone all year.
natural
Some people call her a hermit, but she just loves her own company.
natural
You don't have to be a hermit to enjoy some quiet time.
natural