be bothered
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See also: bebothered
English
[edit]Verb
[edit]be bothered (third-person singular simple present is bothered, present participle being bothered, simple past was bothered, past participle been bothered)
- (chiefly in the negative) To have the enthusiasm (to do something).
- I can't be bothered to clean the house today.
- He can't be bothered drying all those dishes.
- 1986, Vladimir Naumovich Zharkov, translated by William B. Hubbard, Interior Structure of the Earth and Planets, CRC Press, →ISBN, page 273:
- An egg and rasher of bacon for breakfast supply quite enough nitrogenous food for the day. Sometimes I have a treat. A cauliflower, etc. But generally I can't be bothered.
- 1992, Victoria Branden, In Defence of Plain English: The Decline and Fall of Literacy in Canada, Dundurn, →ISBN, page 88:
- I've been using a computer instead of a typewriter for four years now, but I can't speak the language at all. I don't need it, and I can't be bothered unless it's going to be useful. The only kind of mouse I recognize is the four-legged variety, and I can't tell a bit from a byte.
Usage notes
[edit]- Normally used with "can't", "couldn't" or "cannot".