英:[məˈrɔ:dɪŋ]
美:[məˈrɔdɪŋ]
英:[məˈrɔ:dɪŋ]
美:[məˈrɔdɪŋ]
adj.
到处抢劫的,劫掠的
v.
抢劫( maraud的现在分词 )
掠夺
词根:maraud
n.marauder 掠夺者;抢劫者;猛虎
maraud 掠夺;袭击
vi.maraud 袭击
vt.maraud 掠夺;袭击
Adjective
1. characterized by plundering or pillaging or marauding;
"bands of marauding Indians"
"predatory warfare"
"a raiding party"
French marauder
The first known use of maraud was in 1684
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
1 The marauding orcs had been waylaid and almost all destroyed; the remnant had fled westward towards the mountains, and were being pursued.
2 Women not only worked side-by-side with men but became the banks and protectors from marauding bandits, petticoats often proving stronger than steel as a place to stash gold nuggets.
3 And some of the series’ machine-tooled set pieces – The Mandalorian’s attempts to recover his kit from a bunch of marauding Jawa in episode two is a gilded example – put their big screen counterparts to shame.
4 Their music is molten and tender, tainted only by the fact Sieglinde is already married to an oaf, and Siegmund's on the run from a marauding clan.
5 I ask him why Hollywood and Silicon Valley are still such benighted places about women’s rights, with conspiracies of silence about raging sexism and marauding predators.
6 Today, as any owner of a “pitbull-type” dog* can attest, parents often recoil in horror when they spot one of these animals, pulling their children close as if to protect them from a marauding werewolf.
7 Many a marauding bird had been driven off by these same tiny archers.
8 Thunderous jungle drums clear a path for the marauding “Black Skinhead.”
9 The hay — not to mention the marauding birds, “The Wizard of Oz” and the narrative legerdemain — could easily have made “You Will Get Sick” too self-consciously poetic, its spray of images dissipating too quickly.
10 These tips allow you to experience the best of the city without the marauding hordes.
11 Reports say the attacks were planned in Pakistan and would have seen gun-marauding insurgents on the streets of some of Europe's largest cities.
报道称,这些袭击在巴基斯坦计划,某些反叛分子将在欧洲一些大城市街头实施抢劫行为。
12 Fish tanks evoke the days when marauding armies would besiege the town and the townspeople would survive on trout from those tanks along with grain stored in lofts.
13 Entire episodes could revolve around Arg being controlled via a neurological microchip implanted by a nefarious scientist, or Harry taking down a band of marauding yetis with a set of enchanted ninja stars.
14 Only rain, marauding waves of black ocean and the flotsam of tragedy.
15 As he searches for her – meanwhile taking on "a strange beam of soporific light, and a host of marauding Soul Pirates" – he embarks on "a dangerous journey into a land he may never forget".
16 Among these makeshift shelters and marauding glue sniffers, hope is only one of the many things to die.
17 Apart from gangs of marauding youths, some of whom are lighting fires in an alleyway – the tradition of outlawry persists! – there isn't much happening in Robin Hood when I get there.
18 I wasn’t angry, like I was back in our house when I almost turned a shotgun on our marauding neighbors.
19 Manchester United fans may not like this but Phil Jones shares with another Prestonian a sweet marauding talent that sweeps him out of defence and up the pitch.
曼联球迷可能不喜欢,但琼斯虽然到处踢得很欢但防守的位置感还是差点。
20 Gizmo: don't feed him after midnight unless you really like marauding green monsters.