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free agent

自由职业者,自由人,自由职业人,免费代理

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : a person who is self-determining and is not responsible for his or her actions to any authority.
    • : a professional athlete who is not under contract and is free to auction off his or her services and sign a contract with the team that offers the most money.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • Watt, who turns 32 next month, will become a free agent and can sign with any team after his release is official.

  • This baseball offseason, like the 46 before it in the free agent era, has shown once again that nothing, not even the economic damage of a pandemic, can keep team owners from falling in love with star players, and the hope that they symbolize.

  • Now the team has Heinicke and probably will re-sign Kyle Allen, an exclusive rights free agent, sometime before March 17.

  • He preferred to study game tape, to evaluate free agents and college prospects for the draft.

  • One player to keep an eye on is Jacoby Brissett, who is a free agent and played previously in New England.

  • Before anti-vaxxers, there were anti-fluoriders: a group who spread fear about the anti-tooth decay agent added to drinking water.

  • In other words, the free thinker defending freedom of thought.

  • Tend to your own garden, to quote the great sage of free speech, Voltaire, and invite people to follow your example.

  • The simple, awful truth is that free speech has never been particularly popular in America.

  • Cambodia, with its seemingly free press, is also a haven for foreign journalists.

  • What need to look to right or left when you are swallowing up free mile after mile of dizzying road?

  • It seemed to free her of a responsibility which she had blindly assumed and for which Fate had not fitted her.

  • That the inconstancy of such notices, in cases equally important, proves they did not proceed from any such agent.

  • If we can free this State of Yankees, we will accomplish more than your armies down south have.

  • The voice of the orator peculiarly should be free from studied effects, and responsive to motive.