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frat

/frat/US // fræt //UK // (fræt) //

兄弟会,兄弟姐妹会,博爱,友好社

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1

    Informal.

    • : fraternity.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • Druski From plumbers to car salesmen and frat boys to football coaches, social media sketch comedian Druski has been providing laughs and solace throughout the dark days of the pandemic.

  • An Ohio freshman died after drinking a bottle of liquor in a frat hazing.

  • Leda can’t remember much of the evening, except that she ran into Charlotte outside a frat house, which might mean she was the last one to see the young woman before she disappeared.

  • There’s a lot more kids back to school than this… It’s not like they are going to a frat party in Arizona where nobody is minding any protocols at all.

  • Now there’s added concern from other students and community members because frat parties continue.

  • I have very mixed feelings about what the event has become, which is just one big frat party.

  • In Confessions of an Ivy League Frat Boy, the self-induced, self-absorbed Greek tragedy of Andrew Lohse.

  • It is about an hour into our interview, but it is not the first sign of frat-boy cockiness veiled in jokes.

  • Earlier this year, the fraternity news website Total Frat Move declared Fireball “the most popular shot for college students.”

  • Like a point in life where the frat house is too far in the rearview mirror for the behavior to be acceptable?

  • "It has nothing to do with the secret proceedings of your 'frat'," said Dora, primly.

  • The too fatherly "frat seniors" did all that Fred said they would, and more.

  • The train pulled out with a last cheer from the frat fellows, and Burt and Howard realized that they were actually off.

  • They told him all their news, what games had been won, who had made Phi Beta Kappa, and what had happened at the frat.

  • I asked him straight out if it was to curry favor with the frat.