英 [sliːz] 美 [sliːz]
n. 劣等品;卑鄙的人;肮脏;不名誉的状况
vi. 松松垮垮地进行;缓慢无力地移动
sleaze /sliːz/
不可数名词 You use sleaze to describe activities that you consider immoral, dishonest, or not respectable, especially in politics, business, journalism, or entertainment. (政治、商业、新闻或娱乐业中的) 不名誉
She claimed that an atmosphere of sleaze and corruption now surrounded the government.
她声称目前声名狼藉和腐败的氛围笼罩着这个政府。
... broker v.从中调解,安排;斡旋 sleaze n. 不道德的行为(与性及谎言有关) congestion n. 交通堵塞 ...
... bargain rate 讨价还价的价格... sleaze 低劣 tat 梭织 ...
... slap v. 打一巴掌 sleaze adj. 质地薄的 ,常指衣物 slit n. 狭长的裂缝 ...
... sleaze = 廉价 sleazes = 廉价 sleazier = 更加单薄 ...
sleazy 质地薄的;肮脏的;低级庸俗的;破烂的
The candidate was seriously damaged by the sleaze factor.
那位候选人的形象因丑闻而受到严重损害。
She claimed that an atmosphere of sleaze and corruption now surrounded the government.
她声称目前声名狼藉和腐败的氛围笼罩着这个政府。
The first is, unsurprisingly, sleaze.
第一个问题毫无意外,即肮脏的行径。
He wants a radical break with the cartels, sleaze and weak institutions of the post-communist era.
Mr Blair's problem is that he came to office having contrasted Labour integrity with Tory sleaze.
According to the Blairites, this is quite, quite different from the sleaze that engulfed the Tories.