きずつけ
Meanings
Verb (1-dan, transitive)
1. to wound; to injure
2. to hurt someone's feelings (pride, etc.)
3. to damage; to chip; to scratch
Pitch accent
ずつけ
Composed of
wound; injury; chip; crack; flaw; defect
to attach; to join; to furnish (a house with); to wear; to put on; to keep a diary; to make an entry
Examples (27 in total)
I'm sorry if I hurt you.
I never wanted to hurt you.
His words hurt her feelings.
I didn't mean to hurt you.
It is bad to hurt others.
He hurt his left hand with a knife.
Which bug hurt you?
I didn't want to hurt anyone, and I didn't want to hurt myself.
We told a lie to him, and hurt him.
Did she hurt that kitten?
His words wounded Meg.
He tried not to hurt others' feelings.
I didn't mean to hurt your feelings.
He hurt his hand when he fell.
That incident harmed his reputation.
The words hurt his pride.
Don't worry. I won't hurt her.
He did not intend to hurt your feelings.
Because of my weakness, I hurt you.
A casual remark can hurt someone.
"I'm sorry I hurt you." "Don't apologize. You didn't do anything wrong, Tom."
The scandal has badly damaged his clean image.
He was very hurt by her cruel words.
His sharp words seemed to hurt her.
I'm sorry, I didn't mean to hurt your feelings.
Afraid of hurting his feelings, I didn't tell him the truth.
I have never killed nor injured anybody.