foul play

犯规行为犯规犯规游戏犯规事件

foul play 的定义

n. 名词 noun
  1. any treacherous or unfair dealing, especially involving murder: We feared that he had met with foul play.
  2. unfair conduct in a game.

foul play 近义词

n. 名词 noun

treacherous action

更多foul play例句

  1. There was no evidence of foul play when he was found in his cell.
  2. The family of a missing 72-year-old Lorton woman who investigators say may be the victim of foul play pleaded for the public’s help in locating her Tuesday as authorities announced a $20,000 reward in the case.
  3. People who knew the two women, including Conner’s father, who spoke at the vigil, have said the cause of death for both women had yet to be determined, but there is no evidence of foul play such as physical violence.
  4. When he checked in days later and found tire tracks, he figured foul play was afoot.
  5. The cause of the fire has not yet been determined, officials said, but foul play is not suspected.
  6. Have there been discussions with FX regarding an Archer movie, and how do you think that would play out?
  7. Father Joel Román Salazar died in a car crash in 2013; his death was ruled an accident, but the suspicion of foul play persists.
  8. He plays an aging punk rocker and I play the drummer from his old band.
  9. When fathers hold and play with their children, oxytocin and prolactin kick in, priming them for bonding.
  10. Ironically, the play deals with the ‘management’ of information by the Establishment.
  11. I assure you, no matter how beautifully we play any piece, the minute Liszt plays it, you would scarcely recognize it!
  12. But I hope at least to play to him a few times, and what is more important, to hear him play repeatedly.
  13. To fill up the time till Liszt came, our hostess made us play, one after the other, beginning with the latest arrival.
  14. Again the sallow fingers began to play with the book-covers, passing from one to another, but always slowly and gently.
  15. Her attachment to impressionism leads this artist to many experiments in color—or, as one critic wrote, "to play with color."