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 rogue [rәug]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 恶棍, 流氓, 小淘气

vt. 欺骗

vi. 游手好闲

[法] 流氓, 无赖, 歹徒




    rogue
    [ noun ]
    a deceitful and unreliable scoundrel
    <noun.person>


    Rogue \Rogue\, n. [F. rogue proud, haughty, supercilious; cf.
    Icel. hr?kr a rook, croaker (cf. {Rook} a bird), or Armor.
    rok, rog, proud, arogant.]
    1. (Eng.Law) A vagrant; an idle, sturdy beggar; a vagabond; a
    tramp.

    Note: The phrase rogues and vagabonds is applied to a large
    class of wandering, disorderly, or dissolute persons.
    They were formerly punished by being whipped and having
    the gristle of the right ear bored with a hot iron.

    2. A deliberately dishonest person; a knave; a cheat.

    The rogue and fool by fits is fair and wise. --Pope.

    3. One who is pleasantly mischievous or frolicsome; hence,
    often used as a term of endearment.

    Ah, you sweet little rogue, you! --Shak.

    4. An elephant that has separated from a herd and roams about
    alone, in which state it is very savage.

    5. (Hort.) A worthless plant occuring among seedlings of some
    choice variety.

    {Rogues' gallery}, a collection of portraits of rogues or
    criminals, for the use of the police authorities.

    {Rogue's march}, derisive music performed in driving away a
    person under popular indignation or official sentence, as
    when a soldier is drummed out of a regiment.

    {Rogue's yarn}, yarn of a different twist and color from the
    rest, inserted into the cordage of the British navy, to
    identify it if stolen, or for the purpose of tracing the
    maker in case of defect. Different makers are required to
    use yarns of different colors.


    Rogue \Rogue\, v. i.
    To wander; to play the vagabond; to play knavish tricks.
    [Obs.] --Spenser.


    Rogue \Rogue\, v. t.
    1. To give the name or designation of rogue to; to decry.
    [Obs.] --Cudworth.

    2. (Hort.) To destroy (plants that do not come up to a
    required standard).

    1. The rogue program immobilized an estimated 6,000 computers linked to the Internet research system, including ones at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, military bases and major universities.
    2. All the genuineness goes into the love-in between the star and the fans, their appreciation of a jolly rogue - and that is why the panties play is more important than the performance.
    3. So the gap between the two has widened again. This is a small consolation when set against both auction houses' sales in the rogue record year of 1989-90 when Sotheby's registered a turnover of Pounds 1.96bn and Christie's Pounds 1.46bn.
    4. The Iran-Contra scandal isn't proof that covert operations are immoral, or that the CIA is a rogue elephant in need of heavy chains.
    5. If India plays the rogue elephant and starts trampling its neighbors, the entire region, including India, will suffer; the Soviet Union will benefit.
    6. A Cornell University graduate student was indicted on a felony charge stemming from creation of a rogue computer "virus" that paralyzed as many as 6,000 computers last fall.
    7. I knew then I would never get that interview with Philby. Shortly afterwards the old rogue died and the Berlin Wall came down.
    8. (On this point the Gipper had lost his marbles.) In the post-Cold War world, defenses aren't just a barrier against rogue warriors who can threaten us from a Libya or (maybe someday) Argentina; they're also insurance against a new arms race.
    9. Hurricanes, typhoons and great white sharks get more ink, but rogue waves, which occur in all oceans and large lakes as well, have also been the dread of sailors since the first man went to sea.
    10. He appeared to have been seized by rogue Shiites who flatly declared that they were acting to short-circuit the process of releasing Western hostages.
    11. Joe Hirst, an expert on computer sabotage, told The Associated Press the rogue disk was not of the virus type, which spoils computer systems by duplicating itself, but a "Trojan" which does direct damage.
    12. In 1987, the Conservatives were always some 10 points ahead in the opinion polls and there was only one minor hiccup when a rogue Gallup poll on 'wobbly Thursday' a week before the June 11 election suggested that there might not be an overall majority.
    13. For anyone interested in the subject, there is nothing here which has not already been thoroughly cooked up elsewhere. Robinson holds up for display - not contempt, exactly - a global rogue's gallery of convicted criminals.
    14. Jurors were told during a technical and sometimes-complicated three-week trial that Burleson planted a rogue program in the computer system used to store records at USPA and IRA Co., a Fort Worth-based insurance and brokerage firm.
    15. At that point, a rogue wave knocked Bob into the rigging hard enough that he suffered deep cuts in his forehead, nose and lip.
    16. But Mr. Lance is far from alone in asserting that the CIA's dealings with the rogue bank went beyond the routine financial contacts that the agency has admitted to publicly.
    17. While that concern may now go underground for a while, it is unlikely to disappear altogether and could resurface at any sign, rogue or otherwise, of economic strength.
    18. Anti-apartheid groups have alleged that police, rogue elements of the security forces and white extremists have spurred on the fighting.
    19. Visitors have faced demands for money from corrupt customs officials or been robbed by rogue taxi-drivers.
    20. It was great fun, but at the end of each day, it was the police who were laughing, at him and all the other rogue entrepreneurs.
    21. The essence of the intricate plot is what effect this rogue missile has on the Central Intelligence Agency's various plans to eliminate Fidel Castro.
    22. But many analysts believe some of the violence is organized, possibly by rogue elements in the security services determined to preserve white rule at any price.
    23. Who was this rogue romantic, this complicated personality who knew about football yet knew about opera, and who believed that Puccini could provide an anthem for the terraces? Whoever they were, they took a bold and beautiful decision.
    24. "Thus is born a new star in our rogue's gallery of frivolous lawsuits," he wrote in his opinion.
    25. But these were not rogue troops under the command of some extremist general.
    26. Sounds like a rogue operation to us.
    27. A New Jersey company is offering to "inoculate" computers against "viruses," or rogue programs that are designed to spread from computer to computer and damage data the computers store.
    28. Armed with a clearer understanding of the conditions likely to produce rogue waves, oceanographers also are getting better at predicting them, at least in a general way.
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