hot foot 的 3 个定义
plural hot·foots.
- 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.
- Informal. to go in great haste; walk or run hurriedly or rapidly: to hotfoot it to the bus stop.
- with great speed in going; in haste.
hot foot 近义词
等同于 caper
更多hot foot例句
- Gay marriage was the hot-button fight on the left and right.
- Everybody is trapped in an elevator together and tempers run a little hot.
- Even the hot Jewish women I mentioned above did something a bit more “intellectual” than pageantry: acting.
- There was deep brown flesh, and bronze flesh, and pallid white flesh, and flesh turned red from the hot sun.
- Many Jewish women have been accepted as conventional, mainstream hot.
- The bride elect rushes up to him, and so they both step down to the foot-lights.
- In the drawing-room things went on much as they always do in country drawing-rooms in the hot weather.
- I find myself chained to the foot of a woman, my noble Cornelia would despise!
- “You appear to feel it so,” rejoined Mr. Pickwick, smiling at the clerk, who was literally red-hot.
- We had now approached closely to the foot of the mountain-ranges, and their lofty summits were high above us in mid-air.