smear

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  • n. Î۵㣻ͿÁÏ£»·Ì°ù
smeared smeared smearing smears
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v. (¶¯´Ê)
  1. ÔÚ¡­Í¿£¬Í¿ÉÏ£¬Í¿Ä¨£¬²ëÉÏ£¬Ä¨ÉÏ£¬²ÁÉÏ
  2. Óá­Ä¨£¬°Ñ¡­²ÁÄ£ºý£¬ °Ñ¡­²äµÃÄ£ºý²»Ç壬Ĩ²Áʹ±äÄ£ºý£¬Ä¨Ôà
  3. ŪÔ࣬ŪÎÛ£¬Í¿ÎÛ£¬çèÎÛ
  4. ·Ì°ù£¬ÖÐÉË£¬Ú®»Ù£¬ÔãÌ£(ÃûÓþ)
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  6. ɱµô
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  8. ¡¾Ò½Ñ§¡¿°Ñ¡­ÖƳÉͿƬ(ÒÔ×÷ÏÔ΢¾µ¼ì²é)
  9. ±»ÅªÔà
  10. ±»²ÁÄ£ºý
n. (Ãû´Ê)
  1. ·Ì°ù£¬ÖÐÉË£¬Ú®»Ù£¬ÎÛÃï
  2. Î۵㣬ÎÛ×Õ£¬Óͼ££¬Î۰ߣ¬ÎÛ¼£
  3. ¡¾Éú¡¿Í¿Æ¬
  4. Í¿ÆᣬͿÁÏ£¬ÓÔ
  5. Ó͸à
  6. ͿĨÎï
adj. (ÐÎÈÝ´Ê)
  1. ·Ì°ùµÄ£¬Ú®»ÙµÄ

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v. (¶¯´Ê)
  1. vt. ͿĨ spread a greasy or sticky substance
  2. vt. ŪÔ࣬ŪÎÛ make sth dirty or greasy
  3. vt. °Ñ¡­²ÁÄ£ºý blur sth by rubbing it
  4. vt. çèÎÛ£¬Ú®»Ù damage sb or sb's reputation by suggesting they have acted immorally
n. (Ãû´Ê)
  1. [C] ÎÛ¼££¬ÎÛ°ß mark made by smearing
  2. [C] ·Ì°ù£¬ÎÜÃï suggestion or accusation that damages sb's reputation

Ó¢Ó¢ÊÍÒå

Noun:
  1. slanderous defamation

  2. a thin tissue or blood sample spread on a glass slide and stained for cytologic examination and diagnosis under a microscope

  3. a blemish made by dirt;

    "he had a smudge on his cheek"

  4. an act that brings discredit to the person who does it;

    "he made a huge blot on his copybook"

Verb:
  1. stain by smearing or daubing with a dirty substance

  2. make a smudge on; soil by smudging

  3. cover (a surface) by smearing (a substance) over it;

    "smear the wall with paint"
    "daub the ceiling with plaster"

  4. charge falsely or with malicious intent; attack the good name and reputation of someone;

    "The journalists have defamed me!"
    "The article in the paper sullied my reputation"

smearµÄÓ÷¨ºÍÑùÀý£º

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ÓÃ×÷¶¯´Ê (v.)
  1. We smeared cream on our faces.
    ÎÒÃÇÔÚÁ³ÉϲëÑ©»¨¸à¡£
  2. You should smear your hands with grease.
    Äã¸Ã°ÑË«ÊÖÍ¿ÉÏÓÍÖ¬¡£
  3. He smeared some balm on his hand to soothe the pain.
    ËûÔÚÊÖÉÏÍ¿ÁËЩҩ¸àÀ´Ö¹Í´¡£
  4. Don't smear the lens; I've just polished it.
    ±ð°Ñ¾µÍ·ÅªÔàÁË£¬ÎÒ¸Õ¸Õ²Á¹ý¡£
  5. The window was all smeared after the rain.
    ϹýÓêºó´°»§¶¼ÔàÁË¡£
  6. My opponent tried to smear my reputation .
    ÎҵĶÔÊÖ¾¹ÏëÚ®»ÙÎÒµÄÃûÉù¡£
  7. The Socialists were trying to smear Churchill as a warmonger.
    ¹¤µ³Æóͼ·Ì°ùÇñ¼ª¶ûÏÈÉúÊÇÕ½Õù··×Ó¡£
ÓÃ×÷Ãû´Ê (n.)
  1. There was a smear of blood on the wall.
    ǽÉÏÓÐһƬѪ¼£¡£
  2. Cervical cancer can be effectively prevented by regular Pap smear examination.
    ×Ó¹¬¾±°©¿ÉÇáÒ×ͨ¹ý¶¨ÆÚ½øÐÐ×Ó¹¬¾±Ï¸°û¼ì²éÔ¤·À¡£
  3. He fought a vicious smear campaign against them.
    Ëû¿ªÊ¼Õë¶ÔËûÃǽøÐжñ¶¾µÄ·Ì°ù¡£
  4. This accusationof bribery is a vile smear on an honourable citizen .
    ÕâÏîÓйػ߸µÄÖ¸¿ØÊǶÔÒ»¸öÕýÖ±¹«ÃñµÄÎ޳ܷ̰ù.

´Ê»ã´îÅä

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  • A smear of red lipstick on her lips.

    ³ö×Ô£º D. Hogan
  • The floor was wet and his feet left smears.

    ³ö×Ô£º N. Lowndes
  • His dungarees were smeared with paraffin.

    ³ö×Ô£º J. Masefield
  • Bread thickly smeared with treacle.

    ³ö×Ô£º J. L. Waten
  • Soot smeared our faces.

    ³ö×Ô£º A. Toffler

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