bias

 /ˈbaɪ.əs/ có thành kiến, thành kiến (n, v) (singular and plural noun)
The senator has accused the media of bias. Nghị sĩ vừa mới cáo buộc sự thiên vị (thành kiến của truyền thông).
Reporters must be impartial and not show political bias.
She showed a scientific bias at an early age.
(v) to give a settled and often prejudiced outlook to
His background biases him against foreigners. Xuất thân của cậu ta làm cho anh ấy có thành kiến với người nước ngoài.

prejudiced (a) /ˈpredʒ.ə.dɪst/ showing an unreasonable dislike for something or someone.
The campaign is designed to make people less prejudiced about AIDS.
Người ta tổ chức cuộc tuần để giúp cho mọi người giảm bớt kì thị với những người bị bệnh AIDS.
(a) influenced by personal opinion
I thought the speaker's presentation sounded prejudiced. Tôi đã nghĩ buổi thuyết trình nghe có vẻ thành kiến.

run off

to leave somewhere or someone suddenly: bỏ đi, bỏ nhà ra đi, bỏ một người nào đó = run away/off with sb; run away/off together
to leave home, your husband, wife, etc. in order to have a relationship with another person.
My wife has run off with another man. Vợ tôi bỏ đi theo người đàn ông khác.
She ran off/away with her boss. Cô ta bỏ chồng đi theo ông sếp.
She and her boss ran away together.

runaway

run‧a‧way /ˈrʌnəweɪ/ (adj)
  1. a runaway vehicle or animal is out of control or escaped from somewhere: con vật bất kham hoặc chiếc xe không còn nằm trong vòng kiểm soát
    a runaway horse/bus
    A runaway bus/horse caused chaos on the streets.
    A runaway duckling: chú vị đi hoang/bất trị
  2. happening very easily or quickly, and not able to be controlled: xảy ra quá dễ dàng hoặc quá nhanh, và không thể kiểm soát được
    a runaway winner: người chiến thắng nhanh chóng vánh
    a runaway victory
  3. a runaway person has left the place where they are supposed to be; having left without telling anyone ~ go wild: đi hoang = devenir comme foa
    runaway children: những đứa trẻ đi hoang

lose yourself in something

  1. to become so interested in something that it takes all your attention.
  2. to be paying so much attention to something that you do not notice anything else.
    She listened intently to the music, losing herself in its beauty.
    Losing yourself in a great novel is one of life's joy. Here our critics Ceri Radford and Chris Harvey pick the books you need to read.

slurp

/slɜːp/ (v, informal) to drink a liquid noisily as a result of sucking air into the mouth at the same time as the liquid: húp canh/súp gây ra tiếng kêu rất thô
Try not to slurp.
I wish you wouldn't slurp your soup like that.
He slurped down his coffee.to drink - Cambridge English Thesaurus article page
The children were eating pizza and slurping lemonade.

© 2013 - 2026. Tung NGUYEN. Using CI version: 3.0.2 | Page rendered in 0.0092 seconds.