frisk
frisk 英 [frɪsk] 美 [frɪsk]
vi. 蹦跳;欢跃 n. 搜身;快乐;蹦跳;快乐的时刻 vt. 轻摇
进行时:frisking 过去式:frisked 过去分词:frisked 第三人称单数:frisks 名词复数:frisks
- To frisk someone is to search them, usually for weapons. It’s typical for a crime show to portray a police officer frisking a suspect.
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- vi. 蹦跳;欢跃
- n. 搜身;快乐;蹦跳;快乐的时刻
- vt. 轻摇
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1. frisk your home.
搜查你的家。
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2. Professor Levine paints a sordid picture: young police officers are funneled into low-income black and Hispanic neighborhoods where they are encouraged to aggressively stop and frisk young men.
莱文教授在我们面前展示了如下一幅不为认知肮脏的画面:年轻的美国警官们沿着曲折的小巷,悄无声息地进入美国各个低收入的黑人和西班牙族裔街区,在这些地方,警方鼓励甚至纵容年轻刚入道的警官们随意拦截搜查在这附近出现的年轻人。
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3. She offers the tease without the squeeze, attraction without satisfaction, frisk without risk.
她给予戏弄却不带纠缠, 诱惑却不带满足, 欢快却不带危险.
- frisk (v.) 1510s, "to dance, frolic," from Middle English adjective frisk "lively" (mid-15c.), from Middle French frisque "lively, brisk," in Old French "fresh, new; merry, animated" (13c.), which is possibly from a Germanic source (compare Middle Dutch vrisch "fresh," Old High German frisc "lively;" see fresh (adj.1)). Sense of "pat down in a search" first recorded 1781. Related: Frisked; frisking. As a noun, "a frolic, gambol," from 1520s.
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