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Từ điển Việt Anh Việt 4in1 - English Vietnamese 4 in 1 Dictionary 
	
		   
 unkind     
  un‧kind /ˌʌnˈkaɪnd◂/ BrE  AmE  adjective    [Word Family: adjective: ↑kind ≠ ↑unkind, ↑kindly; noun: ↑kindness ≠ ↑unkindness; adverb: ↑kindly ≠ ↑unkindly]    nasty, unpleasant, or cruel:         A lot of unkind things were said.    unkind to        Her husband is very unkind to her.   —unkindly adverb   —unkindness noun [uncountable]       • • •   REGISTER    In everyday English, people usually say mean, nasty, or horrible rather than unkind:    ▪  The other kids were really mean  to me.       • • •   THESAURUS     ▪ unkind treating people in a way that makes them unhappy or upset. Unkind  sounds rather formal. In everyday English, people usually say mean or nasty:  Children can be very unkind to each other. |  a rather unkind remark     ▪ mean especially spoken unkind:  Don’t be mean to your sister! |  It was a mean thing to do.     ▪ nasty deliberately unkind, and seeming to enjoy making people unhappy:  He said some really nasty things before he left. |  a nasty man     ▪ hurtful unkind – used about remarks and actions:  Joe couldn’t forget the hurtful things she had said. |  Couples sometimes do hurtful things to each other.     ▪ spiteful deliberately unkind to someone because you are jealous of them or angry with them:  The other women were spiteful to her, and gave her the hardest work to do. |  She watched them with spiteful glee  (=pleasure).     ▪ malicious deliberately behaving in a way that is likely to upset, hurt, or cause problems for someone:  Someone had been spreading malicious rumours about him. |  There was a malicious smile on her face. |  an act of malicious vandalism |  The accusations are malicious.     ▪ unsympathetic not seeming to care about someone’s problems, and not trying to help them or make them feel better:  Her parents were very unsympathetic, and told her that she deserved to fail her exam. |  an unsympathetic boss     ▪ hard-hearted very unsympathetic and not caring at all about other people’s feelings:  Was he hard-hearted enough to leave his son in jail overnight? |  a hard-hearted businessman      very unkind     ▪ horrible especially spoken very unkind:  Why is Jack always so horrible to me?     ▪ cruel very unkind and deliberately making people feel unhappy or making them suffer physically:  Her father was very cruel to her. |  a selfish, cruel woman     ▪ wicked /ˈwɪkəd, ˈwɪkɪd/ extremely unkind and behaving in a very immoral way:  a wicked thing to do |  the wicked stepmother in Cinderella     ▪ sadistic extremely unkind and enjoying making other people suffer:  Their father was a sadistic bully who beat them regularly. |  He took a certain sadistic pleasure in his job.      unintentionally unkind      ▪ thoughtless/inconsiderate not thinking about the effects of your actions on other people:  It was inconsiderate of him not to say that he would be late. |  a thoughtless disregard for other people’s feelings     ▪ tactless someone who is tactless carelessly says or does things that are likely to upset someone, without realizing what they are doing:  How could you be so tactless? |  a tactless question     ▪ insensitive behaving in a way that is likely to upset someone, or not seeming to care about someone’s feelings. Insensitive is rather a formal word:  The article is insensitive to the family and friends of the victim. |  He later admitted that some of his remarks were ‘insensitive’.
  unkindhu| ◎ | [ʌn'kaind] |  | ※ | tính từ |  |   | ■ | không tử tế, không tốt; độc ác, tàn nhẫn |  |   | ■ | nghiệt ngã; không dễ chịu, khắt nghiệt (khí hậu) |  
 
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