displeasure
displeasure — 名詞
1. the unhappy or disappointed feeling you have when a situation, event, or person'
不高興
因不滿或失望而產生的不快感受
the unhappy or disappointed feeling you have when a situation, event, or person's actions are not what you wanted, expected, or thought was right
The manager expressed his displeasure with the team's slow progress on the project.
經理對團隊在專案上的緩慢進度表達了不滿。
collocation: express displeasure with [something]
A look of displeasure crossed Ingrid's face when she saw the bill.
一看到帳單,Ingrid 的臉上掠過一絲不悅的神情。
collocation: look of displeasure
The committee voiced its strong displeasure over the sudden budget cuts.
委員會對突如其來的預算削減表達了強烈不滿。
Shirin could not hide her displeasure when the restaurant got her order wrong.
餐廳送錯餐點時,Shirin 藏不住她的不高興。
Parents wrote to the school board to show their displeasure at the new rules.
家長們寫信給學校董事會,表達對新規定的不滿。
- dissatisfaction
less emotional than 'displeasure'; focuses on unmet expectations rather than active annoyance
- annoyance
less formal and more common in everyday speech; suggests a milder, more temporary feeling
- disapproval
focuses on a judgment that something is morally or socially wrong, not just unpleasant
- pleasure
the direct opposite; a feeling of happiness or satisfaction
- satisfaction
focuses on contentment with how things turned out
文法句型
displeasure at/with/over something
someone's displeasure
show/express/voice displeasure
用法筆記
Common in formal or semi-formal contexts — writing, meetings, official complaints. In everyday conversation, words like 'annoyance' or 'unhappiness' are more natural. Frequently takes a prepositional phrase with 'at,' 'with,' or 'over' to specify the cause.