| 单词 | shoot-out | 
| 释义 | shoot-outn. Originally U.S.  1.  A sustained exchange of shooting, a gun-fight. ΘΚΠ society > society and the community > dissent > contention or strife > 			[noun]		 > an act or instance of flitec1000 strifea1225 wara1300 pulla1400 lakec1420 contenta1450 stour?c1450 contentiona1500 pingle1543 agony1555 feudc1565 combat1567 skirmish1576 grapple1604 counter-scuffle1628 scuffle1641 agon1649 tug1660 tug of war1677 risse1684 struggle1692 palaver1707 hash1789 warsle1792 scrabble1794 set-to1794 go1823 bucklea1849 wrestle1850 tussle1857 head-to-head1884 scrum1905 battleground1931 shoot-out1953 mud-wrestle1986 society > armed hostility > military equipment > operation and use of weapons > action of propelling missile > discharge of firearms > 			[noun]		 > exchange of firing shoot-up1922 shoot-out1953 1953    N.Y. Times 5 July  vii. 13/2  				The justly famous shoot-out between the Earps and the Clantons in the O-K Corral. 1968    ‘J. R. Macdonald’ Instant Enemy xxx. 188  				The last thing needed was the kind of shoot-out in which innocent people could get hurt. 1969    Daily Tel. 17 Jan. (Colour Suppl.) 15/3  				In one ‘shoot-out’ that developed, Oakland police killed a 17-year-old Panther, Bobby Hutton, while he was unarmed. 1975    Atlanta Jrnl. 20 Jan. 1/2  				In the ensuing shootout Sunday, the man who fired the shot was killed. 1981    Economist 8 Aug. 34/1  				The normal run of muggings, burglaries and rapes has been exacerbated by shootouts..among ‘cocaine cowboys’.  2.  transferred. In Football, a tie-breaker (see quot. 1978). ΘΚΠ society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > ball game > football > association football > 			[noun]		 > tie-break shoot-out1978 1978    Guardian Weekly 16 June 19/4  				If the match is still tied..the teams resort to a shoot-out. Five different members of each team take a free shot at goal, starting from the 25 yard line and having five seconds to dribble the ball before shooting. If even these ten shots fail to produce a decision, they play a sudden death shoot-out until one side wins. 1979    Globe & Mail 		(Toronto)	 1 May 48/9  				Johann Scharmann converted the deciding shot in a shootout to win it for Detroit Express. Draft additions 1993 b.  figurative. An intense and decisive contest; a dispute or competition. ΘΚΠ society > society and the community > dissent > competition or rivalry > 			[noun]		 > a contest or competition > decisive Waterloo1816 shoot-out1975 1975    Business Week 27 Oct. 94 f  				He would like congress to fund a ‘shoot-out’ contest between two prototype platforms. 1976    Washington Post 19 Apr.  a4/1  				Church's strategy is to have the decisive shoot~out on the Senate floor in a major public debate. 1978    Fortune 31 Dec. 59  				In the quick-draw tradition of the Old Wild West stagecoach, the two major lines have responded to adversity..by taking on one another in a fierce and profitless shootout over passenger fares. 1985    Dirt Bike Mar. 24/1  				In our year-end shootout the Kawasaki finally came out on top by virtue of sheer horsepower. 1987    Darts World Mar. 24/3  				He reduced the arrears to 3–1 with a 21-dart shootout. 1988    Squash World May–June 19/4  				Cardwell and Irving set off at a furious pace and a memorable shoot-out looked in prospect as they shared the opening two games in just 20 minutes. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1986; most recently modified version published online December 2020). <  | 
	
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