2EMBARRASSEDto suddenly feel very uncomfortable or embarrassed because of something that happens, something you remember etc 〔因发生或记起某事等而突然〕感到不安;畏缩SYN cringe
wince at the memory/thought/idea
I still wince at the thought of that terrible evening.
想起那个可怕的夜晚,我仍然不寒而栗。
—wince noun [singular]
Examples from the Corpus
wince• Halting in front of the mirror in the front room, the mirror that he had forced her to stare into, she winced.• We drank and winced and waited for the lesson to begin.• I winced as the engine caught.• She winced at their infelicities, at the clumsy way they beat about the bush.• His microphonewhistled a little and Sallywinced in embarrassment.• Ralph winced, turned his attention to another man, a man drawing a woman over to his stool.• Fred often winced when he witnessed his wife's impudence and guile, but he realised she was right.• He undressed, then crawled be-tween the grittysheets, wincing with each creakingspring.• When he laughed, he winced with pain.
wince at the memory/thought/idea• He winced at the memory as he hammered on the steel and then looked through the spyport.• She bit her lip, wincing at the memory of her resentfulscheming.
Originwince
(1200-1300)Old North Frenchwenchier“to be impatient, move about suddenly”