maraud如何读

英:[mə'rɔ:d]

美:[məˈrɔd]

maraud是什么意思

  • v.抢劫;掠夺
  • n.抢劫

maraud自然拼读

ma·raud

m rawd

maraud变形

第三人称单数:marauds

现在分词:marauding

过去式:marauded

过去分词:marauded

maraud扩展

marauder (n.)

maraud词根

词根:maraud

adj.

marauding 抢劫的;劫掠的;巡行作案的;潜行捕食的

n.

marauder 掠夺者;抢劫者;猛虎

v.

marauding 抢劫(maraud的ing形式)

maraud英英释义

intransitive verb

to rove about in search of plunder; make a raid.The pirates marauded, and the governor of the island was helpless against them.

transitive verb

to raid or invade in order to plunder.

maraud词源中文解释

"抢劫寻找,为掠夺而进行的远足",尤指有组织的士兵等,1711年,源自法语 marauder(17世纪),源自 maraud "恶棍"(15世纪),一个起源不明的词,可能来自法语方言 maraud "公猫",模仿其叫声。

这个词在三十年战争期间在几种语言中流行(西班牙语 merodear,德语 marodiren, marodieren "抢劫", marodebruder "落单者,逃兵")通过与帝国将领 Mérode 的双关语联系而流行。相关词汇: Marauded; marauding。

maraud词源英文解释

French marauder

The first known use of maraud was in 1684

maraud儿童词典英英释义

march1 of 4noun

a border region : frontier

a district originally set up to defend a boundary—usually used in plural

the Welsh marches

march2 of 4verb

to move along with a steady regular stride especially in step with others

to move in a direct purposeful manner : progress

march3 of 4noun

the action of marching

the distance covered within a period of time by marching

a regular even step used in marching

forward movement : progress

the march of time

a musical piece with a strong regular rhythm that is suitable to march to

March4 of 4noun

the third month of the year

march1 of 4noun

a border region : frontier

a district originally set up to defend a boundary—usually used in plural

the Welsh marches

march2 of 4verb

to move along with a steady regular stride especially in step with others

to move in a direct purposeful manner : progress

march3 of 4noun

the action of marching

the distance covered within a period of time by marching

a regular even step used in marching

forward movement : progress

the march of time

a musical piece with a strong regular rhythm that is suitable to march to

March4 of 4noun

the third month of the year

marblingnoun

a mixture of fat and lean in a cut of meat

marble1 of 2noun

a limestone that takes a high polish and is used in architecture and sculpture

something made from marbleespecially: a piece of sculpture

a little ball (as of glass) used in various games

plural a children's game played with these little balls

marble2 of 2verb

to give a streaked, spotted, or blotched appearance to (as by staining)

marble the edges of a book

marbledadjective

made from or decorated with marble

having markings or color similar to marble

having lines of fat throughout

marbled meat

marble1 of 2noun

a limestone that takes a high polish and is used in architecture and sculpture

something made from marbleespecially: a piece of sculpture

a little ball (as of glass) used in various games

plural a children's game played with these little balls

marble2 of 2verb

to give a streaked, spotted, or blotched appearance to (as by staining)

marble the edges of a book

maraudverb

to roam about and raid in search of things to steal

maraudverb

to roam about and raid in search of things to steal

maraud 例句

1 These days, when marauding tribes usually aren’t an imminent risk, anxiety isn’t much use.

2 That’s all fine and good for shows that might appeal to a younger, less hard-drinking crowd, but what about the midnight marauding EDM audience, who are used to, and expect, the party to go all night long?

3 "Faced with the search for Susan, a strange beam of soporific light, and a host of marauding Soul Pirates, the Doctor is promised a dangerous journey into a land he may never forge."

4 This much is undisputed: hundreds of rally attendees—some armed with metal flagpoles, baseball bats, pepper spray and stun guns—smashed their way into the Capitol building and loitered in the halls, splintering off to rummage through offices or maraud an empty chamber of Congress.

5 But the Ferrari, one could say, of buffalo mozzarella owes its smooth intensity to the rich milk of the water buffalo, first taken to Italy from Asia in the Middle Ages by those marauding Crusaders.

6 The spectacle also features no forces of order to protect it, leaving the innocent populace equally vulnerable to a hacker and a marauding American criminal allied with a Chinese woman untethered to the government.

7 Since the city’s founding, visitors have included marauding Turks, Arab invaders, a shipwrecked Richard the Lionhearted and Napoleon’s army.

8 The heroine of Tyler J. Kupferer’s “The Girl and the Fox” comes to see a marauding animal in a new light, while “The Mantis Parable,” by Josh Staub, teaches a gentle lesson in compassion.

9 The annual festival sheds light on the Nordic warriors who marauded around the UK.

10 What both the marauding southern tribes — which besiege the garrison where Marcus is stationed at the beginning of the movie — and their northern counterparts evoke, of course, are the Indians in an old western.

11 But years later, even rural people aren’t safe from marauding bandits or militias collecting tribute.

12 So that I can maraud through human minds, like I’m doing right now in yours.

13 Seven “barons” control the country, employing warriors called “clippers” to protect them from the other barons and from marauding bands of “nomads.”

14 Her mother is hesitant to help her, because a book was published revealing that Sarah helped create Hep V and thus helped create the gangs of marauding infected vamps.

15 To a marauding Scandinavian, everyone looks like a big southern Jessie.

16 Among these makeshift shelters and marauding glue sniffers, hope is only one of the many things to die.

17 “Especially considering the fact that there may be a troupe of marauding demons in these parts. Besides, you already offered to make me dinner tonight.”

18 The poisonous rains and packs of marauding, monstrous children make a few ominous appearances then recede into the background like stage props.

19 Maximilian said, peering around in case a band of marauding monkeys had just entered the room.

20 The film starred Dustin Hoffman as an American mathematician pushed to violence by marauding hooligans at his adopted British home.

maraud 同义词

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