pugnacious
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English 5++LDOCE 5++pug·na·cious /pʌɡˈneɪʃəs/ adjective formal FIGHTvery eager to argue or fight with people 爱争吵的,易滋事的,好斗的 The professor had been pugnacious and irritable. 那位教授好斗而易怒。 —pugnaciously adverb —pugnacity /pʌɡˈnæsəti/ noun [uncountable]
Examples from the Corpus
pugnacious• The missing face is that of the late Cecil Spence, Mayor in 1977-78 and as principled as he was pugnacious.• When drinking, he becomes pugnacious and rude.• Reg Seekings, a short, stocky and pugnacious East Anglian, had achieved a considerable reputation in the boxing ring.• A caustically witty and pugnacious man, Wade is a charismatic speaker who can keep a crowd spellbound.• Congressmen have been less pugnacious since then, and in exchange Mr Borja has stopped trying to reform things much.• A man of great personal charm, he was yet stubborn and pugnacious towards those with whom he disagreed.• Crystalizing these feelings was a youthful, pugnacious writer named Norman Mailer.Origin pugnacious (1600-1700) Latin pugnax, from pugnare “to fight”pug·na·cious adjectiveChineseSyllable
eager argue Corpus to very fight with or
pugnacious
pug‧na‧cious /pʌɡˈneɪʃəs/
adjective formal
The professor had been pugnacious and irritable.
—pugnaciously adverb
—pugnacity /pʌɡˈnæsəti, pʌɡˈnæsɪti/ noun [uncountable]
pug‧na‧cious /pʌɡˈneɪʃəs/
adjective formal Date: 1600-1700
Language: Latin
Origin: pugnax, from pugnare 'to fight'
very eager to argue or fight with people:Language: Latin
Origin: pugnax, from pugnare 'to fight'
—pugnaciously adverb
—pugnacity /pʌɡˈnæsəti, pʌɡˈnæsɪti/ noun [uncountable]