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单词 mousetrap
释义

Definition of mousetrap in English:

mousetrap

noun ˈmaʊstrapˈmaʊsˌtræp
  • 1A trap for catching and usually killing mice, especially one with a spring bar which snaps down on to the mouse when it touches a piece of cheese or other bait attached to the mechanism.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • My first reaction was to send a one word reply then my sense of humour took over and I sent the attached reply: ‘The only free cheese is in a mousetrap!’
    • My reasons for this are as follows: Several people had told me that I should try candy in the mousetrap, as mice like candy.
    • There was a general agreement not to get a cat or mousetraps, but simply to minimize the amount of food left about.
    • At the same time they put out mousetraps to kill the mice that were stealing the bird food.
    • You should bait mousetraps with chocolate, not cheese.
    • Then Bo called him saying, ‘Just watch out when you open the cupboard doors, because I've set some mousetraps.’
    • Ransome searched the local shops in vain for a mousetrap, he even tried the local bakery - surely they had mice - but he needn't have worried.
    • A pest-control firm has launched a chocolate-scented mousetrap after university researchers found rodents preferred it to cheese.
    • After phonecalls to many people, we discover one house which has a spare mousetrap.
    • Each night he set mousetraps to obtain specimens from the small rodent population.
    • In the middle of our interview he left the table to go and deal with a dead mouse from a mousetrap under his cooker!
    • This morning I noticed the mousetrap had moved from its place behind the door to the other side of the room, under the vegetable rack.
    • According to a report in New Scientist, a mousetrap has been developed by Rentokil that will text your mobile to tell you when it has successfully caught one.
    • I notice a high-tech mousetrap by the door - breweries always have problems with mice because of all the grain - but everything looks sparkling clean.
    • He observes him doing the laundry, setting mousetraps, smoking a pipe, taking a bath.
    • One of Lee's jobs is to keep the office mousetraps constantly replenished with cheese: he has stacks of individual cubes in the fridge.
    • One department store noticed a spike in requests for rat-killing products a few years ago, and now they have a full line of devices, from traditional mousetraps to a high-tech contraption that uses a rat-scaring sensor.
    • Hardware such as nails, screws, tools, axes, mops, brooms, rakes, rope, tubs, mousetraps, flashlights, batteries, and barbed wire could be purchased.
    • A political entrepreneur lobbies Congress to prohibit the importation of foreign-made mousetraps.
    • ‘No,’ I said, ‘I'll just put some mousetraps in the garage.’
    1. 1.1British informal mass noun Cheese of poor quality.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • You would never compare mousetrap cheddar with Camembert, so why assume that all goat's cheese will taste the same - overpoweringly rank and, well, goaty?
verb ˈmaʊstrapˈmaʊsˌtræp
[with object]North American informal
  • 1Induce (someone) to do something by means of a trick.

    the editor mousetrapped her into giving him an article
    Example sentencesExamples
    • ‘I'm thinking you know you've mousetrapped me fair and square,’ he told her, ‘but I've a mind to hear a bit more about you before we're off to the South Weald.’
    1. 1.1 Block (a user's) efforts to exit from a website, usually one to which they have been redirected.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • In many cases, the consumer is sent to the other sites involuntarily, which is known in the industry as ‘mousetrapping.’

Phrases

  • a better mousetrap

    • An improved version of a well-known article.

      the people with the better mousetrap will do well
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The old adage, ‘Build a better mousetrap and the world will beat a path to your door,’ may be more optimistic than realistic.
      • ‘If you create a really well-differentiated product that everyone loves, if you deliver a better mousetrap, the customers build the brand for you,’ he said.
      • Who says building a better mousetrap isn't fun?
      • During the wild times of the late 90s, they were hailed as a modern manifestation of the American Dream: Build a better mousetrap and the world will make you a market millionaire as soon as your company goes public.
      • Besides their ability to build better mousetraps, many of these CEOs will drive the growth of their enterprises through the application of sheer will.
      • Six months ago when we were saying we won't sell direct, we'll work with our dealers and figure out a better mousetrap, a lot of people were saying we're crazy.
      • ‘It's about building a better mousetrap,’ Cameron says.
      • Instead of just turning a new idea or technology into a better mousetrap, they suggest ways to transform it into a product that completely changes the game, capturing brand-new customers and thus producing much higher growth.
      • If someone feels that he can build a better mousetrap than his employer wants to make, he can find a way to make it, market it, and perhaps put his former boss out of business.
      • Management must create bigger and better mousetraps with fewer hands.
      • What we're saying is that we can deliver more performance and meet the price threshold by coming up with a better mousetrap.
      • Whether or not one has built a better mousetrap means little if the new improved model cannot be tested.
      • And, despite the best efforts of engineers around the globe to come up with a better mousetrap, the humble battery will be around for a while - it's a very mature technology with more than 100 years of successful application.
 
 

Definition of mousetrap in US English:

mousetrap

nounˈmaʊsˌtræpˈmousˌtrap
  • A trap for catching and usually killing mice, especially one with a spring bar which snaps down on to the mouse when it touches a piece of cheese or other bait attached to the mechanism.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • My first reaction was to send a one word reply then my sense of humour took over and I sent the attached reply: ‘The only free cheese is in a mousetrap!’
    • This morning I noticed the mousetrap had moved from its place behind the door to the other side of the room, under the vegetable rack.
    • There was a general agreement not to get a cat or mousetraps, but simply to minimize the amount of food left about.
    • My reasons for this are as follows: Several people had told me that I should try candy in the mousetrap, as mice like candy.
    • He observes him doing the laundry, setting mousetraps, smoking a pipe, taking a bath.
    • Hardware such as nails, screws, tools, axes, mops, brooms, rakes, rope, tubs, mousetraps, flashlights, batteries, and barbed wire could be purchased.
    • ‘No,’ I said, ‘I'll just put some mousetraps in the garage.’
    • A political entrepreneur lobbies Congress to prohibit the importation of foreign-made mousetraps.
    • After phonecalls to many people, we discover one house which has a spare mousetrap.
    • I notice a high-tech mousetrap by the door - breweries always have problems with mice because of all the grain - but everything looks sparkling clean.
    • One department store noticed a spike in requests for rat-killing products a few years ago, and now they have a full line of devices, from traditional mousetraps to a high-tech contraption that uses a rat-scaring sensor.
    • One of Lee's jobs is to keep the office mousetraps constantly replenished with cheese: he has stacks of individual cubes in the fridge.
    • A pest-control firm has launched a chocolate-scented mousetrap after university researchers found rodents preferred it to cheese.
    • In the middle of our interview he left the table to go and deal with a dead mouse from a mousetrap under his cooker!
    • At the same time they put out mousetraps to kill the mice that were stealing the bird food.
    • Each night he set mousetraps to obtain specimens from the small rodent population.
    • Ransome searched the local shops in vain for a mousetrap, he even tried the local bakery - surely they had mice - but he needn't have worried.
    • According to a report in New Scientist, a mousetrap has been developed by Rentokil that will text your mobile to tell you when it has successfully caught one.
    • You should bait mousetraps with chocolate, not cheese.
    • Then Bo called him saying, ‘Just watch out when you open the cupboard doors, because I've set some mousetraps.’
verbˈmaʊsˌtræpˈmousˌtrap
[with object]North American informal
  • 1Induce (someone) to do something by means of a trick.

    the editor mousetrapped her into giving him an article
    Example sentencesExamples
    • ‘I'm thinking you know you've mousetrapped me fair and square,’ he told her, ‘but I've a mind to hear a bit more about you before we're off to the South Weald.’
    1. 1.1 Block (a user's) efforts to exit from a website, usually one to which they have been redirected.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • In many cases, the consumer is sent to the other sites involuntarily, which is known in the industry as ‘mousetrapping.’

Phrases

  • a better mousetrap

    • An improved version of a well-known item.

      Example sentencesExamples
      • Whether or not one has built a better mousetrap means little if the new improved model cannot be tested.
      • If someone feels that he can build a better mousetrap than his employer wants to make, he can find a way to make it, market it, and perhaps put his former boss out of business.
      • Besides their ability to build better mousetraps, many of these CEOs will drive the growth of their enterprises through the application of sheer will.
      • Management must create bigger and better mousetraps with fewer hands.
      • Instead of just turning a new idea or technology into a better mousetrap, they suggest ways to transform it into a product that completely changes the game, capturing brand-new customers and thus producing much higher growth.
      • During the wild times of the late 90s, they were hailed as a modern manifestation of the American Dream: Build a better mousetrap and the world will make you a market millionaire as soon as your company goes public.
      • The old adage, ‘Build a better mousetrap and the world will beat a path to your door,’ may be more optimistic than realistic.
      • Who says building a better mousetrap isn't fun?
      • ‘It's about building a better mousetrap,’ Cameron says.
      • Six months ago when we were saying we won't sell direct, we'll work with our dealers and figure out a better mousetrap, a lot of people were saying we're crazy.
      • And, despite the best efforts of engineers around the globe to come up with a better mousetrap, the humble battery will be around for a while - it's a very mature technology with more than 100 years of successful application.
      • What we're saying is that we can deliver more performance and meet the price threshold by coming up with a better mousetrap.
      • ‘If you create a really well-differentiated product that everyone loves, if you deliver a better mousetrap, the customers build the brand for you,’ he said.
 
 
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更新时间:2024/12/23 19:27:37