柯林斯詞典jeer /d???/ (jeering,jeered,jeers) 1. V-T/V-I To jeer at someone means to say or shout rude and insulting things to them to show that you do not like or respect them. 嘲弄 Marchers jeered at white passers-by, but there was no violence, nor any arrests. 遊行者們嘲弄路過的白人們,但竝沒有發(fā)生暴力事件,也沒人被逮捕。 Demonstrators jeered the mayor as he arrived for a week-long visit. 示威者們?cè)谑虚L(zhǎng)到達(dá)進(jìn)行爲(wèi)期一周訪問的時(shí)候嘲弄了他。2. jeeringN-UNCOUNT 嘲弄 There was constant jeering and interruption from the floor. 議員蓆上不時(shí)有嘲笑和打岔。3. N-COUNT Jeers are rude and insulting things that people shout to show they do not like or respect someone. 奚落人的話 ...the heckling and jeers of his audience. …觀衆(zhòng)對(duì)他的那些詰問和奚落。 返回 jeering