cagey 的定义
cag·i·er, cag·i·est.
- cautious, wary, or shrewd: a cagey reply to the probing question.
cagey 近义词
tricky
更多cagey例句
- Many birders are cagey about owl sighting locations out of respect for the solitary birds’ privacy and safety, so you likely won’t get far by searching the web.
- Gig companies have sometimes been cagey about how much their workers make, and they’re often changing their formulas.
- Gamaleya has been cagey with its data, too, despite having a four-month head-start on Western pharmas.
- When detectives asked him about his conversation with Lewis, Gilbert was cagey, saying it concerned a “personal matter.”
- Podcast’s ad dollars may be growing, but Tenderfoot TV founder Donald Albright knows how cagey buyers can be.
- Obama has been cagey about where he stands, not wanting to anger environmentalists.
- I can see how it would make people come across as cagey or aloof.
- Pelton is raising money for a trip to central Africa—he says he will be in four countries, and is cagey about naming them.
- And this may well be why the Obama administration is using cagey language to hedge on its commitments.
- However, after some maneuvering by Leno, his cagey manager, and NBC executives, Leno was named host of Tonight.
- He would be cagey enough to stay ignorant of any overt strife or any other skullduggery that could be laid at his door.
- It was wonderful how sort of patriotic and unselfish and religious and cagey he always was.
- Theyve got Rawlings for a manager and hes one of the most cagey men in the game.
- If they really have a ‘man wanted’ sign hung on him he would be too cagey to come around here today.
- Cagey explained the situation, and from then on to train time, Hal was patted and petted and given dainties from lunch baskets.