rogue / roʊg /

💦中学词汇流氓无赖无业游民流氓行为

rogue4 个定义

n. 名词 noun
  1. a dishonest, knavish person; scoundrel.
  2. a playfully mischievous person; scamp: The youngest boys are little rogues.
  3. a tramp or vagabond.
v. 无主动词 verb

rogued, ro·guing.

  1. to live or act as a rogue.
v. 有主动词 verb

rogued, ro·guing.

  1. to cheat.
  2. to uproot or destroy.
  3. to perform this operation upon: to rogue a field.
adj. 形容词 adjective
  1. having an abnormally savage or unpredictable disposition, as a rogue elephant.
  2. no longer obedient, belonging, or accepted and hence not controllable or answerable; renegade: a rogue cop; a rogue union local.
  3. dangerous and unpredictable: a rogue snowstorm.
  4. of or noting a nation or state that defies international treaties, laws, etc.: rogue states that threaten world peace.

rogue 近义词

n. 名词 noun

person who deceives, swindles

更多rogue例句

  1. In addition, the campaign to identify and report rogue traders has led to the closure of almost 4,300 counterfeit-goods workshops in China.
  2. “Big tech is being scapegoated for fundamental flaws in our rogue capitalist system,” says O’Reilly.
  3. In the 2016 presidential election, several electors went rogue.
  4. 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.
  5. Reining in rogue scientists would also require setting up a way for whistleblowers to report possible unapproved research.
  6. Closed courthouses, rogue clerks, and misleading statements from the attorney general as Florida welcomes same-sex marriage.
  7. The duo have five of these rogue installations under their belts, with another coming in early 2015.
  8. It invites dictatorial and rogue regimes to use Americans serving overseas as bargaining chips.
  9. Once he graduated in 2006, Simien took a job as a publicity assistant at Rogue, then a division of Focus Features.
  10. And, unlike former Louisiana Governor Edwin Edwards, McDonnell didn't try to portray himself as a loveable rogue.
  11. But Mr. Howard, dupe or rogue, was extremely busy in publishing to the world the particulars of this extraordinary case.
  12. How daintily they sip it; how happy they seem; how that lucky rogue of an Irishman prattles away!
  13. The nimble little rogue darted into a hole before kitty could even get her paw on his tail.
  14. The waiter, a quick-witted rogue enough, seemed to be thoroughly enjoying this midnight conversation.
  15. "Come hither, rogue," said the baron on Gilbert affecting not to hurry himself out of his usual walk.