释义 |
mobber|ˈmɒbə(r)| [f. mob v.2 + -er1.] 1. One who mobs, in the senses of the verb.
1744Whitefield Brief Acc. Late Trial Wks. 1771 IV. 105 His Majesty had no where put the reins of Government into the hands of mobbers. 1745Byrom Jrnl. & Lit. Rem. (Chetham Soc.) II. ii. 398 He orders no two persons be seen walking together..on pain of being deemed mobbers and rioters. 1885Harper's Mag. Mar. 599 That sparrow..disappeared in a panic, and the whole party of mobbers with him. 2. U.S. (See quot.)
1892E. L. Wakeman in Columbus (Ohio) Dispatch 6 Oct., Those who remove the fish to the stallmens' wagons, or the costers' carts, who are called ‘mobbers’. |