释义 |
Definition of gatecrash in English: gatecrashverbˈɡeɪtkraʃˈɡeɪtˌkræʃ [with object]Enter (a party or other gathering) without an invitation or ticket. you have gatecrashed a private meeting Example sentencesExamples - The angelic party gatecrashed their night watch and the angels invited them to join the revelry.
- The celebrities won, not because of any right to privacy or abuse of an image right, rather because the wedding was seen as a private occasion which was gatecrashed by people who later acted in breach of a duty of confidence.
- You can gatecrash other actors' parties over here, which you'd never do in London.
- Put all this together and the surprise is not that India is gatecrashing the elite superpower league, but that it has not happened earlier.
- ‘No problem’ I said, ‘I've got a few things to do, then maybe I could gatecrash your party later on?’
- They asked him to drive to Portman Square, near Oxford Street, intending to gatecrash a party but they made off without paying, the jury heard.
- I was lucky - I gatecrashed some auditions that an agency was holding and got on their books.
- Somewhere in the bleary early hours of last Friday morning, a bunch of jubilant strangers gatecrashed the victory party of Labour's newest MP.
- When teams from outside the elite gatecrash the party the favoured clubs pick apart their squads to ensure no repetition.
- Back in England, he bought a 600 cc motorbike with hippie flowers painted on the sidecar, which was enough of a babe-magnet to impress his future wife, whom he met after gatecrashing a party.
- Detectives also now believe the men had first attended an earlier party nearby and intended to gatecrash the function in the scout hut.
- He had his recent 18th birthday party gatecrashed by a huge number of people and as a result had to close down the party much earlier than he would have otherwise.
- According to the introductory spiel, this 2002 gig was a private party gatecrashed by a few thousand fans.
- Ejected from the bar late at night, I find myself gatecrashing a 21st birthday party.
- I got the distinct impression that I was pretty much gatecrashing my own birthday party.
- 2004 is a big year, stepping up to play with the big boys on a level playing field, no longer the young whipper snapper who got to gatecrash the elite party.
- It's especially good if you're gatecrashing a victory party for a football team and get to do a lap of honour around the bar with the trophy.
- He must also demonstrate the merger is more beneficial than succumbing to someone trying to gatecrash the party.
- In the evening they gatecrashed the wedding party and again beat up several guests.
- On sitting in a pub she got a text from her flatmate about a party in Clapham which we decided it would be a laugh to go to since we both hadn't gatecrashed a party in years.
Synonyms intrusion, intervention, intercession, involvement, impinging, encroaching, trespass, trespassing, obtrusion Definition of gatecrash in US English: gatecrashverbˈɡātˌkraSHˈɡeɪtˌkræʃ [with object]Enter (a party or other gathering) without an invitation or ticket. the photographer gatecrashed the 2000 wedding in New York Example sentencesExamples - When teams from outside the elite gatecrash the party the favoured clubs pick apart their squads to ensure no repetition.
- The celebrities won, not because of any right to privacy or abuse of an image right, rather because the wedding was seen as a private occasion which was gatecrashed by people who later acted in breach of a duty of confidence.
- The angelic party gatecrashed their night watch and the angels invited them to join the revelry.
- In the evening they gatecrashed the wedding party and again beat up several guests.
- Ejected from the bar late at night, I find myself gatecrashing a 21st birthday party.
- ‘No problem’ I said, ‘I've got a few things to do, then maybe I could gatecrash your party later on?’
- Put all this together and the surprise is not that India is gatecrashing the elite superpower league, but that it has not happened earlier.
- You can gatecrash other actors' parties over here, which you'd never do in London.
- According to the introductory spiel, this 2002 gig was a private party gatecrashed by a few thousand fans.
- It's especially good if you're gatecrashing a victory party for a football team and get to do a lap of honour around the bar with the trophy.
- They asked him to drive to Portman Square, near Oxford Street, intending to gatecrash a party but they made off without paying, the jury heard.
- He had his recent 18th birthday party gatecrashed by a huge number of people and as a result had to close down the party much earlier than he would have otherwise.
- He must also demonstrate the merger is more beneficial than succumbing to someone trying to gatecrash the party.
- 2004 is a big year, stepping up to play with the big boys on a level playing field, no longer the young whipper snapper who got to gatecrash the elite party.
- Detectives also now believe the men had first attended an earlier party nearby and intended to gatecrash the function in the scout hut.
- Somewhere in the bleary early hours of last Friday morning, a bunch of jubilant strangers gatecrashed the victory party of Labour's newest MP.
- I got the distinct impression that I was pretty much gatecrashing my own birthday party.
- I was lucky - I gatecrashed some auditions that an agency was holding and got on their books.
- On sitting in a pub she got a text from her flatmate about a party in Clapham which we decided it would be a laugh to go to since we both hadn't gatecrashed a party in years.
- Back in England, he bought a 600 cc motorbike with hippie flowers painted on the sidecar, which was enough of a babe-magnet to impress his future wife, whom he met after gatecrashing a party.
Synonyms intrusion, intervention, intercession, involvement, impinging, encroaching, trespass, trespassing, obtrusion |