bouncer
保镖,保释人,保镳,保龄球
Related Words
Definitions
- 1
- : a person or thing that bounces.
- : a person who is employed at a bar, nightclub, etc., to eject disorderly persons.
- : something large of its kind.
Synonyms & Antonyms
Examples
The truth is, lots of bouncers on the market are affordable, quick to inflate, and sized for either indoor or outdoor enjoyment.
Some couples can afford to have a medical professional moonlight as a covid bouncer or send at-home PCR tests.
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.
That woman was Ruth Westmoreland, who at the time was working at the Phase 1 as a bouncer.
It’s about whom fashion is trying to delight, whom its bouncers welcome through the door.
But the bouncer catches up with you a couple of blocks away and pops you.
He also failed a drug test and allegedly hit a bouncer so hard he punctured his eardrum.
Another bouncer found me crouched in a corner and escorted me back to the bar.
A few minutes later, the bouncer hands me a paper hat featuring an orange T-Rex about to swallow a smaller blue dinosaur.
Some said yes—but one added, "why would you want to get arrested and be a bouncer?"
To grumble, as Cox pointed out to Mrs. Bouncer, is a verb neuter meaning to complain without a cause.
Feet pounded out of the door above as Fats and the bouncer broke through.
He found himself looking up into the face of a strapping fellow who served Milligan as bouncer.
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!"
Not the least important part of the machinery is the patent “æolian bouncer,” as it is called.