ratting
- IPA[ˈradiNG]
美式
- the activity of hunting or killing rats;desertion of one's party, side, or cause.
noun: ratting
- 釋義
- 相關詞
名詞
- 1. the activity of hunting or killing rats ratting is second nature to a Jack Russell
- 2. desertion of one's party, side, or cause.
- ▪ the action of informing on someone to a person in a position of authority the men were convicted in the killing of a fellow gang member they suspected of ratting
- a rodent that resembles a large mouse, typically having a pointed snout and a long, sparsely ...
- used to express mild annoyance or irritation.
- (of a person, dog, or cat) hunt or kill rats: we would always take a terrier when we fished and the terrier ratted away
Oxford American Dictionary
- a rodent that resembles a large mouse, typically having a pointed snout and a long tail. Some ...
- used to express mild annoyance or irritation.
- hunt or kill rats: we would always take a terrier when we fished and the terrier ratted away
Oxford Dictionary
- very drunk.
Oxford Dictionary
- a narrow hairless tail like that of a rat, or something that resembles one: he's growing it longer, with a thin rat-tail braid at the back
Oxford American Dictionary
- a narrow hairless tail like that of a rat, or something that resembles one: he's growing it longer, with a thin rat-tail braid at the back
Oxford Dictionary
- a group of journalists and photographers who pursue celebrities in a relentless or aggressive way: the rat pack of showbiz hacks
Oxford Dictionary
- a rat used for laboratory research: scientists say such a test already works in lab rats
Oxford American Dictionary
- an unpleasant situation that offers no prospect of improvement: he has to tolerate the rat trap of his first job
Oxford Dictionary
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- IPA[ˈratɪŋ]
英式
- the activity of hunting or killing rats: ratting is second nature to a Jack Russell
Oxford Dictionary