snitch
snitch 英 [snɪtʃ] 美 [snɪtʃ]
vi. 告密;进行小偷小摸 vt. 偷;顺手牵羊 n. 告密者;告发者
进行时:snitching 过去式:snitched 过去分词:snitched 第三人称单数:snitches 名词复数:snitches
- To snitch is to tattle on someone, and a snitch is someone who tattles. If you snitch on your brother when he "borrows" five dollars without asking, he might call you a snitch — but, on the bright side, he'll probably have to pay you back.
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- vi. 告密;进行小偷小摸
- vt. 偷;顺手牵羊
- n. 告密者;告发者
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1. Having a dog around made volunteers 30% less likely to snitch than those who played without one.
有只狗在旁做伴让志愿者的告密几率比没有狗的小组低了30%。
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2. Having a dog around made volunteers 30% less likely to snitch than those who played without one. The moral, then: more dogs in offices and fewer in police stations.
有狗小组的告密率比没有的要低30%。所以从道义上来讲,办公室多养狗,警局少养狗。
- snitch (n.) "informer," 1785, probably from underworld slang meaning "the nose" (1700), which apparently developed from an earlier meaning "fillip on the nose" (1670s). Snitcher in same sense is from 1827.
- snitch (v.) 1803, "to inform," from snitch (n.). Meaning "to steal, pilfer" is attested from 1904, perhaps a variant of snatch (v.). Related: Snitched; snitching.
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