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clyde

/klahyd/US // klaɪd //UK // (klaɪd) //

克里德,克利德,克莱德,克莱德

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1

    Slang.

    • : a stupid, inept, or boorish person.
    • : the brain or mind.

Examples

  • At a news conference Monday, she cited the restaurants Clyde’s and Old Ebbitt Grill.

  • The campaign arm of the Club for Growth has been very active, spending about $500,000 boosting Gurtler and $653,000 attacking Clyde.

  • Additionally, Protect Freedom PAC has spent $494,000 to help Gurtler while a single-candidate super PAC backing Gurtler has thrown in about $414,000 to support him or hit Clyde.

  • As for Clyde, he’s built a reputation for successfully taking on the Internal Revenue Service after it tried to seize nearly $1 million from him.

  • However, Gurtler has questioned why Clyde’s business has continued to sell guns to the agency, as that is seemingly at odds with Clyde’s anti-government rhetoric.

  • They unleashed a hail of bullets to rival the final scene in ‘Bonnie and Clyde.’

  • It has retained a crisis public relations firm, The Clyde Group, and disputed the CIR investigation in other media.

  • All of them, Tuff and Kellie and Clyde and Elsie, like to take this wherever they go: He died doing what he wanted to do.

  • “Lane done what not many people do,” Clyde Frost said in front of his home.

  • “If anything got in the way of a rodeo, like a ball game, the ball game would have to wait,” Clyde Frost said.

  • The town is built on both sides of the Clyde, which is crossed by fine stone bridges, but seven-eighths of it lie on the north.

  • He and I were living “doon the watter,” at Dunoon, on the Clyde, one summer month.

  • As many as six of these little vessels made the Clyde their headquarters and sailed at the regattas.

  • Largs Regatta in 1892 will long be remembered; it was no flat racing, but real steeplechasing in the Clyde.

  • Soon after, in a wilder phase of Clyde weather, 'Mab' and 'Varuna' were caught by a fierce squall and laid down to it.