frisk 的 3 个定义
- to dance, leap, skip, or gambol; frolic: The dogs and children frisked about on the lawn.
- to search for concealed weapons, contraband goods, etc., by feeling the person's clothing: The police frisked both of the suspects.
- a leap, skip, or caper.
- a frolic or gambol.
- the act of frisking a person.
frisk 近义词
cavort
search
frisk 的近义词 5 个
更多frisk例句
- Among those, there were more than 90 instances where people lost money or cars, taken most often during traffic stops, frisks and home searches — even though there weren’t related drug convictions or drug charges.
- Another issue was stop and frisk, which the police had been using to keep shootings down.
- When being processed into solitary confinement, known as the Special Housing Unit, or SHU, the frisk is even more severe.
- “We will reform a broken stop-and-frisk policy to protect the dignity and rights of young men of color,” he bellowed.
- The reason was simple, stop-and-frisk was the high profile cause that grabbed headlines.
- The official compared the change in intelligence strategy to the shift in “stop, question, and frisk” tactics in the street.
- But Tidy was foolish and proud, and, the next time he went out, he began to frisk about very gayly.
- Would that we were like unto these ewe lambs, that we might frisk and gambol among them without evil.
- When grandpa bought Oliver he carried him home between his knees in the carriage, while he drove Frisk, the pony.
- Oh, what a fine view Jimmie had, but he didn't dare frisk around as Billie and Johnnie did, for he was a trifle dizzy.
- Is not this like telling a sick man to get well, or a decrepit old creature to skip and frisk like a child?