英:['mɒbɪʃ]
美:['mɒbɪʃ]
英:['mɒbɪʃ]
美:['mɒbɪʃ]
noun
a large and disorderly crowd of peopleespecially: one bent on riotous or destructive action
informal a large number of people a team greeted by mobs of fans
a mob of shoppers clogged the aisles
a criminal set : gangespecially, often capitalized: mafia sense 1 a mob informant
a member of the Mob
old-fashioned the common people : masses
chiefly Australia a flock, drove, or herd of animals
verb
transitive verb
to crowd about and attack or annoy a crow mobbed by songbirds
mobbed by autograph hunters
to crowd into or around
customers mob the stores on sale days
Noun Latin mobile vulgus vacillating crowd
The first known use of mob was in 1688
mock1 of 3verb
to treat with scorn : ridicule
mocked his ideas
defy sense 2
don't mock the rules
to make fun of by mimicking
mock2 of 3noun
an act of mocking : jeer
someone or something that is made fun of
mock3 of 3adjective
not real : imitation
mock1 of 3verb
to treat with scorn : ridicule
mocked his ideas
defy sense 2
don't mock the rules
to make fun of by mimicking
mock2 of 3noun
an act of mocking : jeer
someone or something that is made fun of
mock3 of 3adjective
not real : imitation
mochanoun
coffee of high quality grown in Arabia
a mixture of coffee and chocolate
moccasinnoun
a soft leather shoe without a heel and with the sole and sides made of one piece
a similar shoe with a separate sole
water moccasin
mobsternoun
a member of a criminal gang
mobilizeverb
to assemble and make ready for action : marshal
mobile1 of 2adjective
capable of moving or being moved : movable entry 1
changing quickly in expression
a mobile face
easily moved
mobile troops
tending to travel or migrate from place to place : migratory
mobile workers
characterized by movement from one social class to another
a mobile society
cellular sense 2
mobile2 of 2noun
an artistic structure that is moved easily or that has parts easily moved (as by a current of air)
mobile1 of 2adjective
capable of moving or being moved : movable entry 1
changing quickly in expression
a mobile face
easily moved
mobile troops
tending to travel or migrate from place to place : migratory
mobile workers
characterized by movement from one social class to another
a mobile society
cellular sense 2
mobile2 of 2noun
an artistic structure that is moved easily or that has parts easily moved (as by a current of air)
mob1 of 2noun
the common people : masses
a large rowdy crowd : rabble
a criminal gang
mob2 of 2verb
to crowd about and attack or annoy
1 He was jailed for his dealings with the Mob.
2 Prudence was construed into timidity, and with every abstention from lead the sailor's mobbish friends grew more daring and outrageous.
3 "But this business of somehow saying that one individual bears the whole blame as opposed to simply the accountability – it feels lynch mobbish."
4 They were not making mobbish demands for vengeance, but worrying about heady judicial rhetoric taking judges far from the reality-based community.
5 The actor's fans mobbed him wherever he went.
6 Perhaps mob and mobbish are rather unfortunate terms.
7 And be judicial, arithmetical, in passing sentence on it; not shrieky, mobbish, and flying off into the Infinite!
8 But the priestly order, if originally by their training at all adorned with the graces proper to their profession, would not have fallen under the influence of acts so entirely mobbish.
9 Nobody can suppose that the consent of a state is any thing more than a fiction, in the view of the federalists, after the mobbish influence used over the Pennsylvania convention.
10 "But this business of somehow saying that one individual bears the whole blame as opposed to simply the accountability - it feels lynch mobbish," he said.
11 In the indictments, prosecutors referred to the group ominously as “The Family,” a name, with its mobbish and Mansonian connotations, that was seldom, if ever, used by the ELF.
12 The police had to be called in to handle the growing mob.
13 But war-fever is a mild variety of mobbish experience as compared with panic in any form, and with superstitious panic most of all.
14 Advertisement After a violent mob of pro-Israeli counterprotesters attacked the encampment on April 30, it was dismantled May 2, with law enforcement arresting more than 200 people.
15 Archbishop Welby admitted feeling sympathy for bankers The Archbishop of Canterbury has described the naming and shaming of bankers in the wake of the financial crisis as "lynch mobbish".
16 Because of his illness on the show, the singer fictionally postponed several tour dates, which drew an angry mob of fans outside his home.
17 You know that we Berkshire people, thanks to our delay in recognizing the State authority, have an evil repute at Boston for a mobbish and ungovernable set.
18 Shoppers mobbed the stores during the holidays.
19 The angry mob smashed store windows and attacked people on the streets.
20 While the mobbish inquisitors were in the height of their office, the women came running up to me, to know what they should do; a constable being actually fetched.
2 骚扰
noise outbreak harassment to-do ado upheaval commotion noisily affray tsimmes hunt harass sturt
3 无纪律的
5 无秩序
chaotic unregulated disorderly anarchic unordered ataxic immethodical disorder chaos anarchy disorganization indiscipline misrule unreason ataxy
6 暴乱的
7 无纪律