释义 |
weasel /ˈwiːz(ə)l /noun1A small, slender carnivorous mammal related to, but smaller than, the stoat.- Genus Mustela, family Mustelidae (the weasel family): several species, in particular M. nivalis of northern Eurasia and northern North America. The family also includes the polecats, minks, martens, skunks, wolverine, otters, and badgers.
A cousin of mink, martens, otters, stoats, weasels and distantly related to seals, badgers are one of our oldest indigenous animals, whose fossil remains have been found to belong to the same era as mammoths....- Mammals such as weasels, foxes, stoats and especially roe deer can wander safely without the risk of being killed by traffic.
- Mammalian carnivores such as weasels and foxes catch voles by chasing or pouncing and are probably just as dangerous in dense cover as in sparse.
1.1 Irish term for stoat. 2A deceitful or treacherous person: he was a double-crossing weasel...- By openly admitting to being philanderers, draft dodgers, liars, weasels and cowards, liberals avoid ever being hypocrites.
- Does the boss who scheduled your sadly abbreviated lunch break deserve to be called a weasel or a stoat?
- They applied for and received deferments, like the little weasels they are.
Synonyms scoundrel, wretch, rogue informal swine, bastard, creep, louse, rat, toad, snake, snake in the grass, serpent, viper, skunk, dog, cur, scumbag, heel, bad lot, nasty piece of work North American informal rat fink Irish informal sleeveen Australian informal dingo vulgar slang shit, sod, son of a bitch, s.o.b. British informal, dated rotter, hound, bounder dated cad archaic blackguard, dastard, knave, varlet verb (weasels, weaselling, weaselled; US weasels, weaseling, weaseled) [no object]1Achieve something by use of cunning or deceit: she suspects me of trying to weasel my way into his affections...- Tell him to weasel his way into the affections of as many receptionists, secretaries and PAs as is humanly possible, since they always know how things work, and he may find that he has been trying to get hold of the wrong person.
- Except that when that happens, I conveniently find some bogus excuse or lame technicality to avoid paying your damages or to weasel my way into only paying part of them.
- I then tried to weasel my way into the audience's affection, assuring punters that if they laughed at all my gags everyone would get their money back on the way out.
1.1chiefly North American Behave or talk evasively: we needed him to take a firm stand, but he weaselled Derivativesweaselly /ˈwiːz(ə)li/ adjective ...- Choose between the weaselly compromises most of us try in an attempt to be healthier and a radically pure approach that will have you forking out enormous sums of money on food supplements.
- I suppose this reflects what she really thinks, as opposed to the similar but more weaselly language crafted by lawyers for the law school's website.
- You know, Kyra, sometimes I worry that I give weaselly answers.
OriginOld English wesle, wesule, of West Germanic origin; related to Dutch wezel and German Wiesel. The sneaky characteristics of this animal were not transferred to people until the late 16th century. Its bad reputation comes from the belief that weasels creep into birds' nests and suck the contents out of their eggs, leaving the empty shell behind. This lies behind the originally US phrase weasel words (early 20th century) for words used to reduce the force of a concept being expressed; the more general verb sense ‘extricate’ (weaselled his way out of doing the chores) arose in the 1950s.
Rhymesdiesel, easel, teasel |