chaser 的定义
- a person or thing that chases or pursues.
- a drink of a milder beverage taken after a drink of liquor.
- Also called chase gun . a gun especially for use when in chase or when being chased.
- a hunter.
- Theater. Chiefly British.the final act or musical number of a vaudeville or variety show.the music played as the audience leaves a theater.
chaser 近义词
等同于 hunter
等同于 playboy
等同于 hunter
等同于 undefiled
等同于 philanderer
等同于 act
等同于 lady-killer
等同于 finale
等同于 fluid
等同于 guard
更多chaser例句
- This Sunday, join a band of storm chasers as they go where few do, for art and adrenaline, for science and survival.
- Getting close, often in a hurricane’s direct path, allows professional storm chasers to document crucial on-field data impossible to obtain from afar.
- Plus, waterfall chasers won’t want to miss Wildcat Branch Falls, a stunning 100-foot cascade.
- Build more homes, ensure that they cannot have a large market share and engage in predatory behavior, and reduce the incentive for yield chasers to further commodify the market.
- By then, the chasers who began four shots behind Matsuyama — Justin Rose, Schauffele, Marc Leishman, Zalatoris — had been sailing sideways variously, and soon the lead reached six.
- Over the course of the series, however, we see Barney go from being a skirt-chaser to someone ready for a committed relationship.
- On the nights before drill, a couple of adult beverages and an Ambien chaser usually did the trick.
- His exasperated intensity was his hallmark—you always knew you were getting his truth, straight no chaser.
- Veteran storm chaser Tim Samaras died Friday in the El Reno, Oklahoma, tornado, along with his son Paul and colleague Carl Young.
- Those into “robo-tripping” often just chug the medicine without any chaser at all.
- They call dad a 'rainbow-chaser,' and say he never can find any pay-rock the way he potters around.
- They should be given frequently—and sharply, and often just at the moment when the chaser is about to catch the runner.
- The game continues until runner is caught, or a time reached when a new chaser and runner are chosen.
- Here was a wild-goose chase indeed, but Aronson had a keen suspicion that it was the goose who was the chaser.
- Then he hoisted the English ensign over the French, and immediately the stranger yawed and fired a bow-chaser.