| 释义 | 
		unctuousunc‧tu‧ous /ˈʌŋktʃuəs/ adjective formal    unctuousOrigin: 1300-1400 Medieval Latin unctuosus, from Latin unctum  ‘ointment’, from unguere;  ➔ UNGUENT  - unctuous food
 - Dave is genuinely friendly without being unctuous.
 
 - Beyond that, it promises to provide a weekly primer on dopey and unctuous behavior among upscale hillbillies who dress well.
 - He seemed anxious to please, but not in an unctuous way.
 - More subtly there is the unctuous sadism of money and of social rank.
 - Rather, it was a way of rejecting unctuous, masochistic denial - which might narrow his perspectives.
 - The fat man loudly prattled unctuous apologies.
 
    too friendly and praising people too much in a way that seems very insincere  SYN  ingratiating—unctuously adverb—unctuousness noun [uncountable]  |