rowdy 的 2 个定义
plural row·dies.
- a rough, disorderly person.
row·di·er, row·di·est.
- rough and disorderly: rowdy behavior at school.
- Slang. great; very enjoyable, often with boisterous fun: a rowdy time at the arcade with my best friends.
rowdy 近义词
boisterous, noisy
person who is boisterous, noisy
更多rowdy例句
- The material is strong enough to handle a rowdy Schnauzer and soft enough for your young kids to bump into.
- For anyone with kids — or a rowdy deskmate — this dual stand is a solid organizer.
- They came upon this rowdy pack of a dozen crazy people naked in a waterfall.
- Plus, the tools themselves are strong and hold up well against a rowdy tailgate party or arduous camping expedition.
- If neurons in a region get rowdy when a person is eating chocolate, well, those cells might be processing taste or directing chewing.
- The sixth-season premiere of the rowdy, take-no-prisoners sitcom opens with a bang—literally.
- The commissioner soon quieted the two rowdy men in the next car.
- The “tents” are semi-permanent buildings holding anywhere from 5,000-9,000 rowdy drinkers.
- On the afternoon of December 7, 1941, Senator Nye addressed several thousand rowdy people at a Pittsburgh America First rally.
- And a few months later, Brown reportedly was kicked out of his Miami condo for hosting a string of rowdy late-night parties.
- A rowdy gang of full five hundred armed mutineers marched up and hustled the mob right and left as they forced a way to the gate.
- They were undeniably rowdy and turbulent, however; quarrelling among themselves almost as much as they did with the Kurds!
- He had drugged himself steadfastly to be rowdy and here was a lady who talked about Latin and right angles.
- Another gentleman going to be killed for the sake of these rowdy swine at home!
- He stopped for an instant to absorb the rowdy racket from the taproom.