释义 |
troll
troll 1 T0375400 (trōl)v. trolled, troll·ing, trolls v.tr.1. a. To fish for by trailing a baited line from behind a slowly moving boat.b. To fish in by trailing a baited line: troll the lake for bass.c. To trail (a baited line) in fishing.2. a. To move around in (an area) or go to (different places) searching for something: "The players cautiously refrain from saying anything candid to the press trolling the clubhouse" (David Grann).b. To examine or search through: trolling the classifieds for a cheap car.3. Music a. To sing in succession the parts of (a round, for example).b. To sing heartily: troll a carol.4. To post inflammatory or irrelevant material on (an electronic forum) to provoke responses.v.intr.1. To fish by trailing a line, as from a moving boat.2. a. To stroll along or wander: "As he was extremely early, he trolled past the community center" (David Bezmozgis).b. To move around in an area or go to different places searching for something.c. To examine or search through something: trolling through old family photos looking for a picture of my aunt.3. Music To sing heartily or gaily.n.1. a. The act of trolling for fish.b. A lure, such as a spoon or spinner, that is used for trolling.2. Music A vocal composition in successive parts; a round.3. a. A person who posts inflammatory or otherwise unwanted material on an electronic forum, especially anonymously.b. The material so posted. [Middle English trollen, to wander about, from Old French troller, of Germanic origin. N., senses 3a and b, influenced by troll.] troll′er n.
troll 2 T0375400 (trōl) n. 1. A supernatural creature of Scandinavian folklore, variously portrayed as a friendly or mischievous dwarf or as a giant, that lives in caves, in the hills, or under bridges. 2. Derogatory A person, especially an older gay man, considered to be unpleasant or ugly. [Old Norse, perhaps akin to Old Norse troða, to step, tread, and dialectal Norwegian trosa, to leave or go off tumultuously.] troll (trəʊl) vb1. (Angling) angling a. to draw (a baited line, etc) through the water, often from a boatb. to fish (a stretch of water) by trollingc. to fish (for) by trolling2. to roll or cause to roll3. (Music, other) archaic to sing (a refrain, chorus, etc) or (of a refrain, etc) to be sung in a loud hearty voice4. (intr) informal Brit to walk or stroll5. (intr) homosexual slang to stroll around looking for sexual partners; cruise6. (Computer Science) (intr) computing slang to post deliberately inflammatory articles on an internet discussion boardn7. the act or an instance of trolling8. (Angling) angling a bait or lure used in trolling, such as a spinner9. (Computer Science) computing slang a person who submits deliberately inflammatory articles to an internet discussion[C14: from Old French troller to run about; related to Middle High German trollen to run with short steps] ˈtroller n
troll (trəʊl) n (European Myth & Legend) (in Scandinavian folklore) one of a class of supernatural creatures that dwell in caves or mountains and are depicted either as dwarfs or as giants[C19: from Old Norse: demon; related to Danish trold]troll1 (troʊl) v.t. 1. to sing or utter in a full, rolling voice. 2. to sing in the manner of a round or catch. 3. to fish in (a body of water) by trailing a line behind a slow-moving boat. 4. to cause to turn round and round; roll. v.i. 5. to sing. 6. to be uttered or sounded in such tones. 7. to fish by trolling. 8. to roll; turn round and round. 9. to move nimbly, as the tongue in speaking. n. 10. a song whose parts are sung in succession; a round. 11. the act of trolling. 12. the lure or hook, with or without the attached line, used in trolling. [1350–1400; Middle English: to roll, stroll; compare Middle French troller to run here and there, Middle High German trollen to walk or run with short steps] troll′er, n. troll2 (troʊl) n. (in Scandinavian folklore) any of a race of supernatural beings, usu. hostile to humans, who live underground or in caves. [1610–20; < Old Norse troll demon] troll - Originally a witch or sorceress.See also related terms for witch.troll Past participle: trolled Gerund: trolling
Present |
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I troll | you troll | he/she/it trolls | we troll | you troll | they troll |
Preterite |
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I trolled | you trolled | he/she/it trolled | we trolled | you trolled | they trolled |
Present Continuous |
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I am trolling | you are trolling | he/she/it is trolling | we are trolling | you are trolling | they are trolling |
Present Perfect |
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I have trolled | you have trolled | he/she/it has trolled | we have trolled | you have trolled | they have trolled |
Past Continuous |
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I was trolling | you were trolling | he/she/it was trolling | we were trolling | you were trolling | they were trolling |
Past Perfect |
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I had trolled | you had trolled | he/she/it had trolled | we had trolled | you had trolled | they had trolled |
Future |
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I will troll | you will troll | he/she/it will troll | we will troll | you will troll | they will troll |
Future Perfect |
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I will have trolled | you will have trolled | he/she/it will have trolled | we will have trolled | you will have trolled | they will have trolled |
Future Continuous |
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I will be trolling | you will be trolling | he/she/it will be trolling | we will be trolling | you will be trolling | they will be trolling |
Present Perfect Continuous |
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I have been trolling | you have been trolling | he/she/it has been trolling | we have been trolling | you have been trolling | they have been trolling |
Future Perfect Continuous |
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I will have been trolling | you will have been trolling | he/she/it will have been trolling | we will have been trolling | you will have been trolling | they will have been trolling |
Past Perfect Continuous |
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I had been trolling | you had been trolling | he/she/it had been trolling | we had been trolling | you had been trolling | they had been trolling |
Conditional |
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I would troll | you would troll | he/she/it would troll | we would troll | you would troll | they would troll |
Past Conditional |
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I would have trolled | you would have trolled | he/she/it would have trolled | we would have trolled | you would have trolled | they would have trolled |
trollA person who posts deliberately inflammatory messages on newsgroups, forums, or blog comment threads with the intention of provoking angry responses.ThesaurusNoun | 1. | troll - (Scandanavian folklore) a supernatural creature (either a dwarf or a giant) that is supposed to live in caves or in the mountainsfolklore - the unwritten lore (stories and proverbs and riddles and songs) of a cultureScandinavia - a group of culturally related countries in northern Europe; Finland and Iceland are sometimes considered Scandinavianmythical creature, mythical monster - a monster renowned in folklore and myth | | 2. | troll - a partsong in which voices follow each other; one voice starts and others join in one after another until all are singing different parts of the song at the same time; "they enjoyed singing rounds"roundpartsong - a song with two or more voice parts | | 3. | troll - a fisherman's lure that is used in trolling; "he used a spinner as his troll"fish lure, fisherman's lure - (angling) any bright artificial bait consisting of plastic or metal mounted with hooks and trimmed with feathers | | 4. | troll - angling by drawing a baited line through the watertrollingangling - fishing with a hook and line (and usually a pole) | Verb | 1. | troll - circulate, move around circle, circulate - move in circles | | 2. | troll - cause to move round and round; "The child trolled her hoop"roll, wheel - move along on or as if on wheels or a wheeled vehicle; "The President's convoy rolled past the crowds" | | 3. | troll - sing the parts of (a round) in successionmusic - musical activity (singing or whistling etc.); "his music was his central interest"sing - deliver by singing; "Sing Christmas carols" | | 4. | troll - angle with a hook and line drawn through the waterangle - fish with a hook | | 5. | troll - sing loudly and without inhibition sing - produce tones with the voice; "She was singing while she was cooking"; "My brother sings very well" | | 6. | troll - praise or celebrate in song; "All tongues shall troll you"praise - express approval of; "The parents praised their children for their academic performance" | | 7. | troll - speak or recite rapidly or in a rolling voicemouth, speak, talk, verbalise, verbalize, utter - express in speech; "She talks a lot of nonsense"; "This depressed patient does not verbalize" | Translationstroll (trəul) noun an imaginary creature of human-like form, very ugly and evil-tempered. (北歐神話中形象似人的)巨人,怪物 (北欧神话中形象似人的)巨人,怪物 troll
troll1. verb In an online platform such as a forum, message board, social media site, etc., to intentionally attempt to antagonize or provoke others by posting inflammatory, irrelevant, or inappropriate messages or other content. The same user kept trolling the message board by posting bizarre images, so we banned him.2. verb To publicly target someone or some entity for ridicule or mockery, typically online, such as via social media, and often in a coy or indirect way. I love how fast food restaurants are now starting to troll each other on Twitter.3. verb To stroll. Primarily heard in UK. We trolled around the park before lunch.4. verb, slang To visit a public place for the purpose of finding a sexual partner. Often said of homosexual men. The days of guys trolling public bathrooms are mostly over.5. noun A nasty and often ugly person. Likened to the legendary creature of the same name known for harassing people and having a grotesque appearance. That man is total troll—who yells at little kids like that?6. noun In an online platform such as a forum, message board, social media site, etc., a person who intentionally attempts to antagonize or provoke others by posting inflammatory, irrelevant, or inappropriate messages or other content. Ugh, don't listen to anything that user has to say, he's a real troll.7. noun An inflammatory, irrelevant, or inappropriate message or other content posted in an online platform such as a forum, message board, social media site, etc., as an intentional attempt to antagonize or provoke others. Don't even bother reading any trolls from that user. He's just trying to start a fight.troll1. n. an ugly person; a grouchy person. Gee, that dame is a real troll. What’s her problem? 2. n. an internet user who sends inflammatory or provocative messages designed to elicit negative responses or start a flame-war. (As a fisherman trolls for an unsuspecting fish.) Don’t answer those silly messages. Some troll is just looking for an argument. 3. n. a message sent by a troll (sense 2). Every time I get a troll, I just delete it. troll booth n. a (highway) toll booth. There’s another troll booth up ahead! See also: trolltroll
troll (trōl), in Scandinavian folklore, dwarfish or gigantic creature of caves and hills. Variously friendly or malicious, trolls toiled as smiths. The mountain king in Ibsen's Peer Gynt is a troll.troll1 Angling a bait or lure used in trolling, such as a spinner
troll2 (in Scandinavian folklore) one of a class of supernatural creatures that dwell in caves or mountains and are depicted either as dwarfs or as giants TROLL (1)An array language for continuous simulation, econometricmodelling or statistical analysis.
["TROLL Reference Manual", D0062, Info Proc Services, MIT(1973-76)].troll (2)An electronic mail message, Usenet posting or other(electronic) communication which is intentionally incorrect,but not overtly controversial (compare flame bait), or theact of sending such a message. Trolling aims to elicit anemotional reaction from those with a hair-trigger on the replykey. A really subtle troll makes some people lose theirminds.MedicalSeebotTROLL
Acronym | Definition |
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TROLL➣Transmitter and Receiver Of Laser Light |
troll
Synonyms for trollnoun (Scandanavian folklore) a supernatural creature (either a dwarf or a giant) that is supposed to live in caves or in the mountainsRelated Words- folklore
- Scandinavia
- mythical creature
- mythical monster
noun a partsong in which voices follow each otherSynonymsRelated Wordsnoun a fisherman's lure that is used in trollingRelated Words- fish lure
- fisherman's lure
noun angling by drawing a baited line through the waterSynonymsRelated Wordsverb circulate, move aroundRelated Wordsverb cause to move round and roundRelated Wordsverb sing the parts of (a round) in successionRelated Wordsverb angle with a hook and line drawn through the waterRelated Wordsverb sing loudly and without inhibitionRelated Wordsverb praise or celebrate in songRelated Wordsverb speak or recite rapidly or in a rolling voiceRelated Words- mouth
- speak
- talk
- verbalise
- verbalize
- utter
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