例句 |
trotnoun a mean or ugly old womana gossipy old trot who never had a good word to say about anyone beldam(or beldame), carline(or carlin, chiefly Scottish), crone, hag, hellcat, witch harpy, shrew, virago trots pl.abnormally frequent intestinal evacuations with more or less fluid stoolsate something that gave us the trots Delhi belly, diarrhea, flux, Montezuma's revenge, runs, turista dysentery, shigellosisscour(s) trotverbto go at a pace faster than a walkhad to trot to keep up with the tour guide's quick pace trotted around the bases after hitting a home run dash, gallop, jog, run, scamper, sprint, trip bound, canter, leap, lope, shag, skip, springbarrel, belt, blast, blaze, blow, bolt, bomb(slang), bowl, breeze, bustle, buzz, cannonball, careen, course, foot (it), hare, hasten, hie, hoof (it), hotfoot (it), hump, hurl, hurry, hurtle, hustle, jet, leg (it), pelt, race, ram, rip, rocket, rush, rustle, shoot, speed, tear, whirl, whisk, zip, zoomnip, patter, scoot, scurry, scuttle, step (along) amble, saunter, shamble, shuffle, strollcrawl, creep, dally, dawdle, dillydally, drag, lag, linger, loiter, poke, tarrylumber, plod, trudgehobble, limp to proceed or move quicklynow trot along and get washed up for supper barrel, belt, blast, blaze, blow, bolt, bomb(slang), bowl, breeze, bundle, bustle, buzz, cannonball, careen, career, chase, course, crack (on), dash, drive, fly, hare, hasten, hie, highball, hotfoot (it), hump, hurl, hurry, hurtle, hustle, jet, jump, motor, nip, pelt, race, ram, rip, rocket, run, rush, rustle, scoot, scurry, scuttle, shoot, speed, step, tear, travel, whirl, whisk, zip, zoom beetle, dart, flit, scamper, scud, scufflestampede, streak, whiz(or whizz)gallop, jog, sprintaccelerate, quicken, step outcatch up, fast-forward, outpace, outrun, outstrip, overtakearrow, beeline beat it, get a move on, make tracks, shake a leg, step on it crawl, creep, poke dally, dawdle, dillydally, drag, hang (around or out), lag, linger, loiter, poke, tarryamble, lumber, plod, saunter, shuffle, strolldecelerate, slow (down or up) in the 14th century |