hot foot / ˈhɒtˌfʊt /

热脚热足热脚丫热脚丫子

hot foot3 个定义

n. 名词 noun

plural hot·foots.

  1. a practical joke in which a match, inserted surreptitiously between the sole and upper of the victim's shoe, is lighted and allowed to burn down.
v. 无主动词 verb
  1. Informal. to go in great haste; walk or run hurriedly or rapidly: to hotfoot it to the bus stop.
adv. 副词 adverb
  1. with great speed in going; in haste.

hot foot 近义词

hot foot

等同于 caper

更多hot foot例句

  1. Gay marriage was the hot-button fight on the left and right.
  2. Everybody is trapped in an elevator together and tempers run a little hot.
  3. Even the hot Jewish women I mentioned above did something a bit more “intellectual” than pageantry: acting.
  4. There was deep brown flesh, and bronze flesh, and pallid white flesh, and flesh turned red from the hot sun.
  5. Many Jewish women have been accepted as conventional, mainstream hot.
  6. The bride elect rushes up to him, and so they both step down to the foot-lights.
  7. In the drawing-room things went on much as they always do in country drawing-rooms in the hot weather.
  8. I find myself chained to the foot of a woman, my noble Cornelia would despise!
  9. “You appear to feel it so,” rejoined Mr. Pickwick, smiling at the clerk, who was literally red-hot.
  10. We had now approached closely to the foot of the mountain-ranges, and their lofty summits were high above us in mid-air.