| 释义 | 
		Definition of pretended in English: pretendedadjective prɪˈtɛndɪdprəˈtɛndəd Not genuine; assumed.  eating ice cream with pretended unconcern Example sentencesExamples -  His whole behavior gives color to the supposition that he was the accomplice of a pretended death.
 -  I accept no responsibility whatsoever for any psychological traumas, mishaps, misfortunes, or bad karma alleged to result from viewing this site, whether real, imaginary or pretended.
 -  While his heart thumped eagerly he went with slow and pretended reluctance back to the old desk.
 -  It would be a very fragile moral and political order that depended upon pretended ignorance of social facts.
 -  When he tried her fidelity by telling her pretended secrets, she divulged them in gossip with the servants.
 -  The pretended purpose of it was to encourage the manufactures, and to increase the commerce of Great Britain.
 -  Even pretended disinterest can destroy thought, or pretended interest can give room for ideas to coalesce.
 -  All the holiness of their lives, I now saw, was merely pretended.
 -  These pretended journeys to France were rather cumbrous.
 -  As the subject increased the imaginary voltage, the man who was supposed to have his memory improved screamed in pretended pain.
 -  She blushed and looked away with pretended indifference.
 -  And he is telling us today with pretended pride that he will do it all over again.
 -  In classical rhetoric it denotes real or pretended doubt about an issue, uncertainty as to how to proceed in a discourse.
 -  In summary, some pretended joy and some very unhappy people.
 -  At each execution of a traitor, or pretended such, anguish seizes the survivors.
 -  She moved from pretended self-sufficiency to a recognition of her need.
 -  Suzie's crew invaded the stage in a fit of pretended madness and simply kicked the daylights out of each other.
 -  Honest dissent is better by far than pretended assent.
 -  She divided the bun in half, giving him the largest portion, and was rewarded with a bit of pretended reluctance and a big smile.
 
    Definition of pretended in US English: pretendedadjectiveprəˈtɛndədprəˈtendəd Not genuine; assumed.  she interrupted him with pretended indignation Example sentencesExamples -  Honest dissent is better by far than pretended assent.
 -  All the holiness of their lives, I now saw, was merely pretended.
 -  His whole behavior gives color to the supposition that he was the accomplice of a pretended death.
 -  These pretended journeys to France were rather cumbrous.
 -  As the subject increased the imaginary voltage, the man who was supposed to have his memory improved screamed in pretended pain.
 -  The pretended purpose of it was to encourage the manufactures, and to increase the commerce of Great Britain.
 -  Suzie's crew invaded the stage in a fit of pretended madness and simply kicked the daylights out of each other.
 -  She moved from pretended self-sufficiency to a recognition of her need.
 -  It would be a very fragile moral and political order that depended upon pretended ignorance of social facts.
 -  While his heart thumped eagerly he went with slow and pretended reluctance back to the old desk.
 -  And he is telling us today with pretended pride that he will do it all over again.
 -  She divided the bun in half, giving him the largest portion, and was rewarded with a bit of pretended reluctance and a big smile.
 -  Even pretended disinterest can destroy thought, or pretended interest can give room for ideas to coalesce.
 -  At each execution of a traitor, or pretended such, anguish seizes the survivors.
 -  In classical rhetoric it denotes real or pretended doubt about an issue, uncertainty as to how to proceed in a discourse.
 -  She blushed and looked away with pretended indifference.
 -  I accept no responsibility whatsoever for any psychological traumas, mishaps, misfortunes, or bad karma alleged to result from viewing this site, whether real, imaginary or pretended.
 -  In summary, some pretended joy and some very unhappy people.
 -  When he tried her fidelity by telling her pretended secrets, she divulged them in gossip with the servants.
 
     |