- 看过 false alarm 的人也看了 :
- dud
- nonstarter
false alarm 的定义
- a false report of a fire in progress to a fire department.
- something that excites unfounded alarm or expectation: Rumors of an impending transit strike proved to be a false alarm.
false alarm 近义词
needless alarm or worry
false alarm 的近义词 3 个
更多false alarm例句
- Last year, Voice of San Diego reviewed dispatch records and found evidence that false alarms were more common than the company’s marketing materials show.
- This flawed technology threatens civil liberties and public safety, generating false alarms that have ended in escalating violence between police and community members.
- In fact, if you tested everyone in the US tomorrow with over-the-counter tests, the large majority of positive results—maybe nine out of 10—would be false alarms.
- One reason is that owing to a history of false alarms about tornado warnings, some people didn’t take shelter.
- Last year, however, a Voice of San Diego review of dispatch records suggested that false alarms were more common than advertised.
- And no issue should be defined by its outliers because it paints a false picture.
- On Christmas Day, sometime after dark, a hideous fire overtook the venue: 100 firefighters, 33 fire trucks, a four-alarm blaze.
- He has contributed to a false picture of law enforcement based on isolated injustices.
- The airline industry objects that sometimes these deployable recorders can pop out without cause, spreading needless alarm.
- “Nothing else to do” was the most common response for why people chose to go to The Ball, though that rang a little false to me.
- Some of the alarm returned, however, when the creature attempted to climb up by his own ladder.
- There is cause for alarm when they bring one hundred and ten ships into these seas without any means of resistance on our part.
- But the sheer quantity of the inflated currency and false money forces prices higher still.
- Her face wore a look of distress, almost of alarm; she kept her place, but her eyes gave Bernard a mute welcome.
- The public eye, ever watchful and timid, waits scarcely for the show of danger to take alarm and withdraw its favour.