bouncer / ˈbaʊn sər /

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bouncer 的定义

n. 名词 noun
  1. a person or thing that bounces.
  2. a person who is employed at a bar, nightclub, etc., to eject disorderly persons.
  3. something large of its kind.

bouncer 近义词

bouncer

等同于 bodyguard

bouncer

等同于 boaster

bouncer

等同于 guard

更多bouncer例句

  1. The truth is, lots of bouncers on the market are affordable, quick to inflate, and sized for either indoor or outdoor enjoyment.
  2. Some couples can afford to have a medical professional moonlight as a covid bouncer or send at-home PCR tests.
  3. Jenny Wanger, director of programs at the Linux Foundation Public Health, compared the issue to showing a bouncer at a bar a driver’s license.
  4. That woman was Ruth Westmoreland, who at the time was working at the Phase 1 as a bouncer.
  5. It’s about whom fashion is trying to delight, whom its bouncers welcome through the door.
  6. But the bouncer catches up with you a couple of blocks away and pops you.
  7. He also failed a drug test and allegedly hit a bouncer so hard he punctured his eardrum.
  8. Another bouncer found me crouched in a corner and escorted me back to the bar.
  9. A few minutes later, the bouncer hands me a paper hat featuring an orange T-Rex about to swallow a smaller blue dinosaur.
  10. Some said yes—but one added, "why would you want to get arrested and be a bouncer?"
  11. To grumble, as Cox pointed out to Mrs. Bouncer, is a verb neuter meaning to complain without a cause.
  12. Feet pounded out of the door above as Fats and the bouncer broke through.
  13. He found himself looking up into the face of a strapping fellow who served Milligan as bouncer.
  14. Begorra, I should know that v'ice; and I'll make the whole school shtand up togither one by one and shout, "Here's a bouncer!"
  15. Not the least important part of the machinery is the patent “æolian bouncer,” as it is called.