rogue 的 4 个定义
- a dishonest, knavish person; scoundrel.
- a playfully mischievous person; scamp: The youngest boys are little rogues.
- a tramp or vagabond.
- (5)
rogued, ro·guing.
- to live or act as a rogue.
rogued, ro·guing.
- to cheat.
- to uproot or destroy.
- to perform this operation upon: to rogue a field.
- having an abnormally savage or unpredictable disposition, as a rogue elephant.
- no longer obedient, belonging, or accepted and hence not controllable or answerable; renegade: a rogue cop; a rogue union local.
- dangerous and unpredictable: a rogue snowstorm.
- of or noting a nation or state that defies international treaties, laws, etc.: rogue states that threaten world peace.
rogue 近义词
person who deceives, swindles
更多rogue例句
- In addition, the campaign to identify and report rogue traders has led to the closure of almost 4,300 counterfeit-goods workshops in China.
- “Big tech is being scapegoated for fundamental flaws in our rogue capitalist system,” says O’Reilly.
- In the 2016 presidential election, several electors went rogue.
- The coronavirus forced Wisconsin to opt out of its game with Nebraska this week, causing Nebraska to try to go rogue and schedule a random matchup against Chattanooga.
- Reining in rogue scientists would also require setting up a way for whistleblowers to report possible unapproved research.
- Closed courthouses, rogue clerks, and misleading statements from the attorney general as Florida welcomes same-sex marriage.
- The duo have five of these rogue installations under their belts, with another coming in early 2015.
- It invites dictatorial and rogue regimes to use Americans serving overseas as bargaining chips.
- Once he graduated in 2006, Simien took a job as a publicity assistant at Rogue, then a division of Focus Features.
- And, unlike former Louisiana Governor Edwin Edwards, McDonnell didn't try to portray himself as a loveable rogue.
- But Mr. Howard, dupe or rogue, was extremely busy in publishing to the world the particulars of this extraordinary case.
- How daintily they sip it; how happy they seem; how that lucky rogue of an Irishman prattles away!
- The nimble little rogue darted into a hole before kitty could even get her paw on his tail.
- The waiter, a quick-witted rogue enough, seemed to be thoroughly enjoying this midnight conversation.
- "Come hither, rogue," said the baron on Gilbert affecting not to hurry himself out of his usual walk.