chase
追逐,追赶,追追追,追寻
Related Words
Definitions
- 1
chased, chas·ing.
- : to pursue in order to seize, overtake, etc.: The police officer chased the thief.
- : to pursue with intent to capture or kill, as game; hunt: to chase deer.
- : to follow or devote one's attention to with the hope of attracting, winning, gaining, etc.: He chased her for three years before she consented to marry him.
- : to drive or expel by force, threat, or harassment: She chased the cat out of the room.
- 1
chased, chas·ing.
- : to follow in pursuit: to chase after someone.
- : to rush or hasten: We spent the weekend chasing around from one store to another.
- 1
- : the act of chasing; pursuit: The chase lasted a day.
- : an object of pursuit; something chased.
- : Chiefly British. a private game preserve; a tract of privately owned land reserved for, and sometimes stocked with, animals and birds to be hunted.
- : British. the right of keeping game or of hunting on the land of others.
- : a steeplechase.
- : the chase, the sport or occupation of hunting: the excitement of the chase.
- 1
- : give chase, to pursue: The hunt began and the dogs gave chase.
Synonyms & Antonyms
Examples
With a dog, use a sit and stay command and then step away to see if they can resist chasing you down.
Tatís has cut down on swings against low-and-away breaking balls, a common chase area for batters, as seen by comparing a heat map from last season with this season.
That, he worries, could lead to the repeat of a scenario India faced between 2009 and 2013, when there was “too much money chasing too few goods.”
Traditionally, long-distance migration is common for the animals, which surprisingly are not keen on chasing prey over extended distances.
They even had a habit of chasing after guys who visited the woods in order to get their sexual fill.
One of the other cops fired three times and those who were still able to give chase did.
The cops gave chase and the gunman fired the big revolver twice more.
You meant to chase every glass of wine with a pitcher of H2O, but the holiday cheer somehow steered you off course.
The bailout crybabies of Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan Chase, Wells Fargo, and all the rest are easy targets—and deserving ones, too.
Maybe our dear bear should sit quietly, not chase piglets and just eat berries and honey.
For a moment Joe stood behind her, silently, looking over her shoulder at the signature of Isom Chase.
Between each group of figures the face of the rock was scored with mysterious signs and rudely limned weapons of war and chase.
On land and in sea the animal creation chase and maim, and slay and devour each other.
Could he have a sorrow which she might chase away, and, having the power, lack the heart to do it?
Thereupon there was a rush forwards; but the chase lasted not only 'a moment,' but a whole hot day.