搜尋結果
scrag
- IPA[skraɡ]
英式
- handle roughly; beat up;grasp (an opponent) by placing an arm around the neck
- an unattractively thin person or animal;a person's neck.
verb: scrag, 3rd person present: scrags, gerund or present participle: scragging, past tense: scragged, past participle: scragged
noun: scrag, plural noun: scrags
- 釋義
- 相關詞
動詞
- 1. British informal handle roughly; beat up my brothers were hoping he'd put a foot wrong so they could scrag him
- ▪ grasp (an opponent) by placing an arm around the neck he was scragged by Budd and Cooper came away with the ball
- 2. US archaic kill by strangling or hanging many an honester man than her has been scragged
- ▪ US informal, dated kill; murder you can think up a nicer way of scragging me than by drowning, because you know I loathe water
名詞
- 1. an unattractively thin person or animal his companion was a thin scrag of a man
- 2. archaic, informal a person's neck.
- the inferior end of a neck of mutton: scrag-end of mutton his story of out-of-work actors at the scrag-end of the 1960s
Oxford Dictionary
- 更多解釋
- IPA[skraɡ]
美式
- handle roughly; beat up.
- an unattractively thin person or animal: his companion was a thin scrag of a man
Oxford American Dictionary