ought

ought1
(3rd sing. present and past ought)
[with infinitive]
  1. used to indicate duty or correctness, typically when criticizing someone's actions
    [常用于批评某人行为,表示责任、义务、正确性]应当,应该
    they ought to respect the law.
    他们应该尊重法律。
    it ought not to be allowed.
    不该允许它发生。
    ■used to indicate a desirable or expected state
    [表示愿望或期望]该,应该
    he ought to be able to take the initiative.
    他应该能采取主动。
    ■used to give or ask advice
    [表示给予忠告或请求别人的忠告]该,应该
    what ought I to do?.
    我该做什么?。
  2. used to indicate something that is probable
    [表示可能]该,应该
    five minutes ought to be enough time.
    五分钟该足够了。
语源
  1. Old English āhte, past tense of āgan 'owe' (see owe)
用法
  1. The verb ought is a modal verb and this means that, grammatically, it does not behave like ordinary verbs. In particular, the negative is formed with the word not alone and not also with auxiliary verbs such as do or have. Thus the standard construction for the negative is he ought not to have goneThe alternative forms he didn't ought to have gone and he hadn't ought to have goneformed as if ought were an ordinary verb rather than a modal verb, are found in dialect from the 19th century but are not acceptable in standard modern English

ought2
(also aught)
noun
  1. archaic term for nought
    (古)。 同 nought
语源
  1. mid 19th cent.: perhaps from an ought, by wrong division of a nought; compare with adder

ought3
pronoun
  1. variant spelling of aught
    同 aught
英语宝典
考试词汇表