英 [ˈdʒɪərɪŋ] 美 [ˈdʒɪrɪŋ]
v. 嘲笑;大声奚落(jeer 的现在分词)
adj. 嘲笑的,奚落的
jeer /dʒɪə/ TEM8 [ jeering jeered jeers ]
及物动词/不及物动词 To jeer at someone means to say or shout rude and insulting things to them to show that you do not like or respect them. 嘲弄
Marchers jeered at white passers-by, but there was no violence, nor any arrests.
游行者们嘲弄路过的白人们,但并没有发生暴力事件,也没人被逮捕。
Demonstrators jeered the mayor as he arrived for a week-long visit.
示威者们在市长到达进行为期一周访问的时候嘲弄了他。
不可数名词 嘲弄
There was constant jeering and interruption from the floor.
议员席上不时有嘲笑和打岔。
可数名词 Jeers are rude and insulting things that people shout to show they do not like or respect someone. 奚落人的话
...the heckling and jeers of his audience.
…观众对他的那些诘问和奚落。
... flouting动词flout的现在进行... jeering嘲弄的 insolent粗野的 ...
There was constant jeering and interruption from the floor.
议员席上不时有嘲笑和打岔。
She flinched as she was carried through an angry, jeering crowd.
她胆战心惊地被人抬着,穿过愤怒和嘲笑的人群。
Then a sozzled client drags him away jeering that he always steals the booze.
然后,一个烂醉的客户拉住他嘲笑他一直在偷酒。
Democratic Majority Whip James Clyburn says the jeering and anger from protesters reminded him of the abuse he was subjected to as an African-American civil rights protester in the 1960s.
VOA : standard.2010.03.25
Not car bombs that leave craters in the road, not jeering crowds that celebrate your destruction.
Their therapeutic visit was marred by a group of schoolchildren jeering at them and calling them "loonies".
BBC: NEWS | UK | Scotland | 'Finding the key to battling stigma'
Their eyes shine with delight for the comic's jeering at the people known here simply as the mullahs.