柯林斯詞典spook /spu?k/ (spooking,spooked,spooks) 1. N-COUNT A spook is a ghost. 鬼[非正式] 2. N-COUNT A spook is a spy. 間諜[美國(guó)英語(yǔ)] [非正式] ...a U.S. intelligence spook. ...一名美國(guó)情報(bào)間諜。3. V-T If people are spooked, something has scared them or made them nervous. 使...嚇壞; 使...緊張[美國(guó)英語(yǔ)] [v-link ADJ] But was it the wind that spooked her? 但是,她是被風(fēng)嚇到的嗎? Investors were spooked by slowing economies. 投資者們因經(jīng)濟(jì)增長(zhǎng)緩慢而變得緊張。4. spookedADJ He was so spooked that he, too, began to believe that he heard strange clicks and noises on their telephones. 他太害怕了,以至於也開(kāi)始相信自己聽(tīng)到了他們的電話發(fā)出的奇怪的哢噠聲。 返回 spook劍橋詞典 spook noun [C] (SPIRIT) informal for ghost (SPIRIT) 鬼,幽霛 The film was dreadful - all spooks and vampires . 那部電影很可怕——全是些鬼魂和吸血鬼。 spook noun [C] (PERSON) US a spy noun 間諜,密探 返回 spook