Worn Meaning in English
word · lemma: wear
/ˈwɔɹn/
worn
/wˈɔːn/
wawn
释义
'Worn' is the past participle of 'wear'. As an adjective, it describes something damaged or made thin by long use, and it can also describe a person who looks tired.
用法与细微差别
Common with objects in phrases like 'worn shoes', 'worn carpet', and 'worn edges'. For people, 'worn' means tired in a visible or emotional way, often stronger than just 'tired'. Do not confuse it with the verb form in perfect tenses: 'I have worn this coat before.'
Spanish: gastado - desgastado - cansadoPortuguese (BR): gasto - desgastado - cansadoPortuguese (PT): gasto - desgastado - cansadoChinese (Simplified): 磨损的 - 破旧的 - 疲惫的Chinese (Traditional): 磨損的 - 破舊的 - 疲憊的Hindi: घिसा हुआ - पुराना - थका हुआArabic: بالي - مهترئ - مُتعَبBengali: ঘষা - ক্ষয় - ক্লান্ত (ব্যক্তি)Russian: изношенный - усталый (о человеке)Japanese: すり切れた - 使い古された - 疲れ切った(人)Vietnamese: mòn - mệt mỏi (người)Korean: 낡은 - 닳은 - 지친 (사람)Turkish: yıpranmış - eskimiş - bitkin (insan)Urdu: پہنا ہوا - تھکا ہوا (شخص)Indonesian: lusuh - aus - kelelahan (orang)
例句
His boots are old and worn.
basic
The carpet looks worn near the door.
basic
She looked worn after the long trip.
basic
This jacket is a little worn, but I still love it.
natural
You look worn out—did you get any sleep?
natural
Years of use had left the table smooth and worn at the corners.
natural