英:[ˈhaiteil it]
美:[ˈhaɪˌtel ɪt]
英:[ˈhaiteil it]
美:[ˈhaɪˌtel ɪt]
<口>奔跑,迅速逃走
Verb
1. flee; take to one's heels; cut and run;
"If you see this man, run!"
"The burglars escaped before the police showed up"
1 In most cases, drivers might hightail it out of there.
2 For an intimate stay, hightail it to Ocean House, a grand 1868 Victorian oceanfront beauty and the crown jewel of the New England town.
3 For 2024, digital screenings will be offered only in the final five days of the festival, starting Jan. 24 — long after many top players typically hightail it out of Utah.
4 Under the guise of sleeping over at Libby’s, the pair hightail it to New York City.
5 But a woman — and all the women in the audience — will endorse her decision to hightail it in the opposite direction.
6 Seeking solace and a renewal of her seasonal spirit, Angelina and her firecracker assistant Monique (Zenzi Williams) hightail it to upstate New York.
7 Families with little kids often hightail it out, but the native of Spain wanted to settle down in a walkable city with a European flair.
8 Additionally, this totalitarian system produces only poverty and hunger, and these poor, hungry people hightail it to the United States.
9 After school, he would hightail it home.
放学后, 他很快地跑回家.