averse的意思和读音

averse

: [əˈvɜrs] : [əˈvɜː(r)s]

adj.

adj.favorable,favourable

adj.opposed,antagonistic,loath,unenthusiastic,hostile

averseadj.

1.not ~ to sth / to doing sthliking sth or wanting to do sth; not opposed to doing sth

I mentioned it to Kate and she wasn't averse to the idea.

2.~ to sth / to doing sthnot liking sth or wanting to do sth; opposed to doing sth

He was averse to any change.

adj.1.,,2.

adj.1.strongly opposed to or disliking something2.describes a leaf or flower that is turned away from the main stem or axis

1. available ; averse aviation ; ...

2. athletics n. averse a. attache n. 使使 ...

3. parliament (), averse ; merchandise ; ...

4. admittance n. averse a. affection n. ...

5. D. seething () ( 2. A. averse) 3. D. typhus () 4. ...

6. avert v (a+ averse a (a+ voy ) ...

:,,,,,,

1.People who regard themselves as risk-averse will assemble portfolios of highly similar stocks that all seem to be 'safe. '

2.The British tend to be risk-averse culturally, he said, and perceived the Americans as unrealistic.

3.I'm not averse to a bit of leg-pulling, but deep down inside me I'm actually quite serious.

4.Some go further and argue that in the new world order, Asia's solid fundamentals make it a haven for the risk-averse.使

5.That said, he wouldn't be averse to you showing up in an Uma Thurman "Pulp Fiction" wig, or even suggesting a private costume party for two.·

6.She was one of the few stay-at-home moms in Ramsey Hill and was famously averse to speaking well of herself or ill of anybody else.

7.With so much bad debt out there - and no one really knows how much there is - banks around the world have become extremely risk-averse.————

8.And the alternatives they chose seem to have been designed more for the risk-averse.

9.In a rare admission for a president famously averse to expressing regret, he fully accepted responsibility for that failure.

10.Stockpile management should also be separated from transparency demands, to which China is averse.