Pried Meaning in English
word · lemma: pry
ˈpɹaɪd
PRYD
pɹˈaɪd
PRYD
释义
'Pried' is the past tense of 'pry.' It means either to force something open with effort or to try to find out private information about someone.
用法与细微差别
'Pried' is formal when referring to forcing objects, but slightly negative and intrusive when about asking personal questions. Common with 'pried open' (a door, a box) or 'pried into' (my life, someone’s secrets). Not to be confused with 'pride.'
Spanish: forzó (abrir) - husmeóPortuguese (BR): forçou (abrir) - bisbilhotouPortuguese (PT): forçou (abrir) - bisbilhotouChinese (Simplified): 撬开 - 刺探Chinese (Traditional): 撬開 - 打探Hindi: उचकाया - ताकझांक कीArabic: اقتَحم (فتح بالقوة) - تجسّسBengali: জোর করে খোলা - নাক গলানোRussian: вскрыл - совать нос (в чужие дела)Japanese: こじ開けた - 首を突っ込んだVietnamese: cạy ra - tò mò (về chuyện riêng tư)Korean: 억지로 열었다 - 캐물었다Turkish: zorlayarak açtı - burnunu soktuUrdu: زبر دستی سے کھولا - دخل اندازی کیIndonesian: mencungkil - ikut campur (urusan pribadi)
例句
He pried the lid off the paint can.
basic
She pried into her friend’s personal life.
basic
They pried the window open with a screwdriver.
basic
Mom always pried into what I was doing after school.
natural
I pried open the old box and found some photos inside.
natural
Reporters pried into the celebrity’s private affairs.
natural