0
Moon7296 Posted 15 years ago
Vocabulary

The feeling of being victimised

Oftentimes, I use a Korean-English dictionary.

Sometimes, the dictionary provides only a clause such as 'the feeling of being victimized.' This is a result for Korean translation. I don't know how to use it in conversation.

For example, there can be a situation of 'the feeling of being victimised' (You think/feel you have a disadvantage from something can be an example.)

How do you put it in word in conversation? Do you say like 'Don't victimise yourself', 'He always feels he has been victimised,' 'You don't need to feel vitimised?'
  

Top answer

He always feels (that) he has been victimised. You don't need to feel vitimised. I feel I'm being victimized.

  • He always feels (that) he has been victimised.
  • You don't need to feel vitimised.
  • I feel I'm being victimized.
  • He shouldn't be feeling he's being victimized.
  • They have always felt (that) they were being victimized.
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

1 Answers
0
He always feels (that) he has been victimised.

You don't need to feel vitimised.

I feel I'm being victimized.

He shouldn't be feeling he's being victimized.

They have always felt (that) they were being victimized.

Related Questions