short-changed
英 [ˌʃɔːt ˈtʃeɪndʒd]
美 [ˌʃɔːrt ˈtʃeɪndʒd]
v. 少找给(某人)零钱; 亏待; 克扣
short-change的过去式
双语例句
- The only way the US can repay its vast borrowings is by debasing the dollar – a process in which China will inevitably be short-changed.
美国偿还其巨额债务的唯一的方法是把美元贬值,而这样中国肯定会吃亏。 - We have been short-changed by the government.
我们被政府骗了。 - Looking back at all the money invested in my more than 20 years of formal education, I feel short-changed by my income and quality of life.
回顾20多年来接受正式教育投入的资金,我感到自己没有从收入和生活质量中得到相应回报。 - That's the second time I've been short-changed in that shop.
那家铺子少找钱给我已是第二次了。 - She complained he had short-changed her, but it was only a matter of a few pence.
她抱怨说他少找钱了,但只是几便士之差。 - I think I've been short-changed at the bar.
我觉得酒吧没给我找够零钱。 - Students at Judge Business School in Cambridge, England, where Mr Roberts is ceo-in-residence, must feel short-changed.
罗伯茨是英国剑桥大学(cambridge)judge管理学院的驻院首席执行官(ceo-in-residence),那里的学生一定感觉上了当。 - This, in turn, has short-changed investments in our own people, and contributed to record deficits.
这反过来减少了我们对自己国民的投资,并催生了破纪录的财政赤字。 - The talks broke down on the US belief that it was being short-changed by the flexibility in agricultural market access indicated by the EU and developing countries.
本轮谈判之所以破裂,是因为美国认为,欧盟和发展中国家在农业市场准入方面表示出的灵活程度,未能给予美国公平的回报。 - Except it seems to me it's a further fact about human psychology that we care more about being short-changed than we do about being, as we might put it, overcompensated.
只不过对我来说,它似乎是更进一步的人类心理学,即我们对于别人少找钱会更在意,而不会在意,过度补偿。