the trots / trɒt /

小跑小步快跑小步走小跑步

the trots4 个定义

v. 无主动词 verb

trot·ted, trot·ting.

  1. to go at a gait between a walk and a run, in which the legs move in diagonal pairs, but not quite simultaneously, so that when the movement is slow one foot at least is always on the ground, and when fast all four feet are momentarily off the ground at once.
  2. to go at a quick, steady pace; move briskly; bustle; hurry.
v. 有主动词 verb

trot·ted, trot·ting.

  1. to cause to trot.
  2. to ride at a trot.
  3. to lead at a trot.
n. 名词 noun
  1. the gait of a horse, dog, or other quadruped, when trotting.
  2. the sound made by an animal when trotting.
  3. the jogging gait of a human being, between a walk and a run.
v. 动词组 verb
  1. trot out, Informal. to bring forward for inspection.to bring to the attention of; introduce; submit: He trots out his old jokes at every party.

the trots 近义词

the trots

等同于 diarrhea

the trots 的近义词 4

the trots构成的短语

  • trot out
  • hot to trot

更多the trots例句

  1. The whole point of being a pageant queen is to trot around in your bikini to be ogled at while feigning sexual naiveté.
  2. And, of course, they trot out the Constitution to justify their actions, much as the slave holders did 150 years earlier.
  3. He had to urge his horse to a trot, and he went tagging alongside the funnel to see what it would do.
  4. Then I just have to “retrieve payload” from Coinapult, trot on back over to Blockchain and BAM!
  5. Oscar forecasters like to trot out old statistics when deciding who will win which awards.
  6. The truth is, it is not safe to trot down such mountains and hardly to ride down them at all.
  7. But I have some more foul way to trot through still, in your Epistles and Satyrs, &c.
  8. Soon he begins to trot, and, when he thinks himself out of sight, bounds off like a greyhound.
  9. To the left of us a horse snorted nervously; we heard him trot with high, springy strides to the end of his rope, and snort again.
  10. I don't want to go back into my life, I don't want to trot out the old 'more sinned against than sinning' cliché.