precious
precious — adjective
1. worth a lot, often because few exist, they cost much, or they matter deeply
worth a lot, often because few exist, they cost much, or they matter deeply
The museum keeps precious coins in a locked glass case.
precious + valuable object
The jeweler weighed the precious gold chain before naming a price.
precious gold chain
Her grandmother wore a precious jade ring at every New Year dinner.
The family saved precious letters from the fire in a metal box.
文法句型
precious coins
precious ring
be precious
用法筆記
Common with jewelry, metals, stones, documents, and other things whose worth comes from rarity, price, or importance. Distinguish from sense 2: this sense names high value itself, not the need to avoid waste.
常見錯誤
2. so useful or limited that you should spend it carefully, not carelessly
so useful or limited that you should spend it carefully, not carelessly
We have only ten minutes, so let's not waste precious time.
precious time
The hospital needs precious space for patients with serious injuries.
precious space
Solar panels can save precious fuel during the cold winter.
Don't use precious battery power for games on the train.
文法句型
precious time
precious space
precious fuel
用法筆記
Usually used for time, space, fuel, energy, money, and other limited resources. Distinguish from sense 1: something can be precious here even if it is not rare or expensive.
常見錯誤
3. loved so much that it has special meaning in your life
loved so much that it has special meaning in your life
This old photo is precious to Maya because it shows her father.
precious to somebody
The song became precious to us after our wedding in Tainan.
become precious to somebody
For Leo, Sunday breakfast with his daughters is precious.
After the storm, the family dog felt even more precious to Ben.
- unimportant
lacking special personal meaning
- replaceable
suggests losing it would not matter much emotionally
文法句型
precious to somebody
be precious to somebody
precious memory
用法筆記
Often follows to when you name the person who feels the affection. Distinguish from sense 1: here the value comes from love or memory, not from money or rarity.
常見錯誤
4. too careful, sweet, or elegant in a way that feels false instead of relaxed
too careful, sweet, or elegant in a way that feels false instead of relaxed
His precious voice made the simple joke sound like a school speech.
critical use about manner of speaking
At dinner, Clara's precious manners annoyed everyone at the table.
precious manners
The actor gave the farmer a precious accent that felt completely fake.
Even the waiters laughed at his precious way of holding the cup.
文法句型
precious manners
precious tone
be precious
用法筆記
Usually critical and often applied to speech, manners, smiles, or style. Distinguish from sense 5: sense 4 attacks the person's artificial behavior, while sense 5 mocks something another person cares about.
常見錯誤
5. said before a noun to mock how important another person thinks it is
said before a noun to mock how important another person thinks it is
Put your precious phone away and help me carry these boxes.
sarcastic precious + noun
Max refuses to share his precious parking space with anyone.
mocking attitude before noun
Lena snapped, 'Move your precious bike,' and blocked the garage door.
Tell your precious boss the team needs a real lunch break.
文法句型
your precious phone
his precious car
their precious plans
用法筆記
Only before a noun, and the tone is annoyed, mocking, or bitter. Distinguish from senses 1 and 3: those are sincere positive meanings, but this sense is sarcastic.
常見錯誤
precious — adverb
1. very; used for extra emphasis, often in an old-fashioned or playful way
very; used for extra emphasis, often in an old-fashioned or playful way
Grandpa says he was precious poor when he first left home.
precious + adjective for extra emphasis
By noon, the soup was precious hot, so Ella waited.
precious hot
That wool blanket felt precious soft after one wash.
The bus came precious late on the rainy mountain road.
文法句型
precious + adjective
precious + adverb
用法筆記
Usually comes before an adjective or adverb, not before a noun. This use is now uncommon and often sounds old-fashioned or regional in speech.