寻找适合你的 英语 教师…
Adrian
What the Chinese equivalent of "sucked in"?
In the sense of being satisfied/happy/delighted at someone's misfortune. Informal.
Example:
A: Did you know that John was caught cheating on the test?!
B: Really!? Haha sucked-in!
The closest in Chinese I've heard of is
幸災樂禍 but it seems a bit formal. Any thoughts?
2016年11月11日 23:42
回答 · 7
6
You can use the word “活該”。
2016年11月12日
1
Mr. Hong's answer is perfect. I would say that too.
2016年11月12日
After asking an Australian friend, I clarified 'sucked in', which still means 'cheated, you believed me', like:
A: Santa Claus is outside on the lawn!
B: (Looks outside, but there is no Santa Claus out there) Where?
A: Haha, (you were) sucked in (by me)
There is no sense of gloating, just a dumb joke
sucked in: 骗: A:哈哈, 笑话,我骗你哦!
2016年11月12日
Is 'sucked in' Oz speak? I am not familiar with this use of sucked in. ‘sucked in' as cheated, 骗 I know and everyone knows the American 'that sucks'. How does 'sucked in' come to have the meaning you attribute to it?
2016年11月12日
还未找到你的答案吗?
把你的问题写下来,让母语人士来帮助你!
Adrian
语言技能
中文, 中文(粤语), 英语, 法语, 意大利语, 日语
学习语言
中文, 中文(粤语), 法语, 意大利语, 日语
你或许会喜欢的文章

How to Ask for a Raise or Promotion in English
8 赞 · 6 评论

The Key to Learning a Language Faster
29 赞 · 8 评论

Why "General English" is Failing Your Career (An Engineer’s Perspective)
29 赞 · 12 评论
更多文章
