英:['slʌɡə(r)]
美:['slʌɡər]
英:['slʌɡə(r)]
美:['slʌɡər]
复数:sluggers
词根:slug
n.slug 鼻涕虫;动作缓慢的人;金属小块
vi.slug 偷懒;动作迟缓
vt.slug 重击
1877年,最初用于棒球,“猛打击球手”的代词,源自 slug(v.)。“用拳头打击的人”的意思来自1883年。Slogger在同样的意义上是在1829年。
强击手
猛击手
The first known use of slugger was in 1877
sluice1 of 2noun
an artificial passage for water with a gate for controlling its flow or changing its direction
a body of water held back by a gate or a stream flowing through a gate
a device (as a floodgate) for controlling the flow of water
a channel that carries off surplus water
a long sloping trough (as for floating logs to a sawmill)
sluice2 of 2verb
to draw off by or through a sluice
to wash with or in water running through or from a sluice
drench, flush
sluice1 of 2noun
an artificial passage for water with a gate for controlling its flow or changing its direction
a body of water held back by a gate or a stream flowing through a gate
a device (as a floodgate) for controlling the flow of water
a channel that carries off surplus water
a long sloping trough (as for floating logs to a sawmill)
sluice2 of 2verb
to draw off by or through a sluice
to wash with or in water running through or from a sluice
drench, flush
slug1 of 3noun
sluggard
a small piece of shaped metal (as a bullet)
a metal disk used in place of a coin in a coin-operated machine
any of numerous long wormlike land mollusks that are related to the snails but have only an underdeveloped shell or none at all
a single drink of liquor : shot
slug2 of 3noun
a heavy blow especially with the fist
slug3 of 3verb
to strike heavily with or as if with the fist or a bat
sluggishadjective
slow in movement or reaction by habit or condition
sluggishadjective
slow in movement or reaction by habit or condition
sluggishadjective
slow in movement or reaction by habit or condition
slug1 of 3noun
sluggard
a small piece of shaped metal (as a bullet)
a metal disk used in place of a coin in a coin-operated machine
any of numerous long wormlike land mollusks that are related to the snails but have only an underdeveloped shell or none at all
a single drink of liquor : shot
slug2 of 3noun
a heavy blow especially with the fist
slug3 of 3verb
to strike heavily with or as if with the fist or a bat
sluggernoun
one (as a batter or boxer) that strikes hard or with heavy blows
1 If the sluggers were looking for someone to save the world, they chose the wrong guy.
2 I was wrong to believe that the sluggers had given me freedom.
3 That athlete is a real slugger.
那个运动员是一个真正的棒球强击手。
4 Though the sluggers had left me alone in the room, I knew they were watching.
5 If my life is meaningless, it makes no sense for the sluggers to spare it.
6 He fanned the slander that Ruth seldom took a bath by sniffing hard and pretending to detect a horrible smell whenever the slugger came near him.
他散播诽谤说鲁斯很少洗澡,每当这位强击手靠近他时都要用力吸气,假装闻到难闻的气味。
7 However, the slugger was only in the lineup for Game 1 of Tuesday’s doubleheader, with the Dodgers opting for a more cautious approach with their $700 million slugger.
8 “Sometimes I ask the sluggers to take me with them instead of sending me back.”
9 I turned to find the source, but the slugger sprouted an appendage and slapped me in the neck.
10 I watched the sky and wondered where the sluggers were.
11 Olympic sprinters and weightlifters, cyclists in the Tour de France, football linemen and baseball sluggers: they have all been shown to swallow whatever pill or powder may give them an edge.
12 If I die before deciding whether to press the button, will the sluggers abduct someone else and force them to choose, or will they let the world end?
13 My vision blurred around the edges, and I thought for a moment the sluggers had come to save me.
14 I was thirteen the first time the sluggers abducted me.
15 The sluggers had ditched the phone but left the tape.
16 On the eighth explosion, the sluggers shocked me again.
17 The sluggers had shown me a projection of the earth exploding again, along with the big, red button, but they hadn’t shocked or blissed me.
18 With the score tied between the Cubs and Yankees, the slugger failed to hit the ball not once but twice.
19 The slugger waved until I stood up, and then its arm melted back into its body.
20 I’ll begin with the night the sluggers told me the world was toast, and when I’m finished, we can wait for the end together.