stalk
- IPA[stɔːk]
英式
- pursue or approach stealthily;move silently or threateningly through (a place)
- a stealthy pursuit of someone or something;a stiff, striding gait.
verb: stalk, 3rd person present: stalks, gerund or present participle: stalking, past tense: stalked, past participle: stalked
noun: stalk
- 釋義
- 相關詞
動詞
- 1. pursue or approach stealthily a cat stalking a bird 同義詞
- ▪ literary move silently or threateningly through (a place) the tiger stalks the jungle fear stalked the camp
- 2. harass or persecute (someone) with unwanted and obsessive attention for five years she was stalked by a man who would taunt and threaten her
- 3. stride somewhere in a proud, stiff, or angry manner without another word she turned and stalked out 同義詞
名詞
- 1. a stealthy pursuit of someone or something this time the stalk would be on foot
- 2. a stiff, striding gait.
- (chiefly of a plant or animal structure) having a stalk or main stem: stalked barnacles a thick-stalked mushroom
Oxford American Dictionary
- (chiefly of a plant or animal structure) having a stalk or main stem: stalked barnacles a thick-stalked mushroom
Oxford Dictionary
- (of a crustacean) having eyes mounted on stalks.
Oxford Dictionary
- (of a crustacean) having eyes mounted on stalks.
Oxford American Dictionary
- a plant of the lily family with bell-shaped flowers carried on bent or twisted stalks, native ...
Oxford American Dictionary
- a plant of the lily family with bell-shaped flowers carried on bent or twisted stalks, native ...
Oxford Dictionary
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- IPA[stôk]
美式
- pursue or approach stealthily: a cat stalking a bird
- a stealthy pursuit of someone or something: this time the stalk would be on foot
Oxford American Dictionary
- IPA[stɔːk]
英式
- the main stem of a herbaceous plant: he chewed a stalk of grass
Oxford Dictionary
- IPA[stôk]
美式
- the main stem of a herbaceous plant: he chewed a stalk of grass
Oxford American Dictionary