put on / noun ˈpʊtˌɒn, -ˌɔn; adjective ˈpʊtˈɒn, -ˈɔn /

穿上穿上了穿着戴上

put on2 个定义

n. 名词 noun

Informal.

  1. an act or instance of putting someone on.
  2. a prank or pretense, especially one perpetrated or assumed in mock seriousness; hoax; spoof.
  3. affected manner or behavior; pretentiousness.
adj. 形容词 adjective
  1. assumed, feigned, pretended, or disguised: a put-on manner that didn't fool anyone.

put on 近义词

v. 动词 verb

pretend

v. 动词 verb

stage a performance

put on 的近义词 5

更多put on例句

  1. To put it rather uncharitably, the USPHS practiced a major dental experiment on a city full of unconsenting subjects.
  2. Just the hard-on before you shoot unarmed members of the public.
  3. Kennedy: "Mankind must put an end to war — or war will put an end to mankind."
  4. Obsessive exercising and inadequate nutrition can, over time, put people at high risk for overuse injuries like stress fractures.
  5. When I put their allegations to Epstein, he denied them and went into overdrive.
  6. He was voluble in his declarations that they would “put the screws” to Ollie on the charge of perjury.
  7. Each day she resolved, "To-morrow I will tell Felipe;" and when to-morrow came, she put it off again.
  8. This is the place where the Muscovite criminals are banished to, if they are not put to death.
  9. Let them open their minds to us, let them put upon permanent record the significance of all their intrigues and manœuvres.
  10. Before the spinet a bench was placed about four feet below the keys, and I was put upon the bench.