释义 |
Definition of hot dog in English: hot dognoun 1A frankfurter, especially one served hot in a long, soft roll and topped with various condiments. Example sentencesExamples - The essence of baseball food is a bun-wrapped wiener - be it hot dog, bratwurst or sausage.
- Fresh meat is lower in sodium than luncheon meat, bacon, hot dogs, sausage and ham.
- At lunchtime there is a poolside barbecue, at tea-time sandwiches and cake, and after hours a hot cabinet serving pizza and hot dogs with fried onions.
- If you don't like the two main entrées and are tired of hamburgers and hot dogs, we serve an outstanding broiled chicken twice a day.
- On Sundays, the bar opens its kitchen, serving burgers, hot dogs, and pizza.
2North American informal A person, especially a skier or surfer, who performs stunts or tricks. 〈北美,非正式〉(尤指滑雪者或冲浪者)表演特技(或花样)的人 macho hot dogs who take too many risks Example sentencesExamples - And with spectacular past performances in hot dog waves as a guide - talent wise - Tim has what it takes to go wire-to-wire.
- The viewers in my house were all worried about redneck/macho reactions among competitors when Kobayashi first won the hot dog round and then went on to win the grand prize.
exclamation North American informal Used to express delight or enthusiastic approval. 〈北美,非正式〉 用于表示高兴或热切的赞同好极了 Hot dog! I've finally found something I can do that you can't Synonyms pose, strike an attitude, put on airs, attitudinize, behave affectedly, strut
verbhotdogging, hotdogs, hotdogged North American informal no object Perform stunts or tricks. 〈北美,非正式〉表演特技(或卖弄技巧) he chastised the dancers who'd been hotdogging 他斥责了卖弄技巧的舞蹈演员。
Derivativesnoun Her brother, Josh De Los Reyes - a former hotdogger and labor and industrial relations graduate student - arranged for the famous frankfurter to surprise her outside the Union on Tuesday. Example sentencesExamples - The hotdoggers said wherever they go they receive an enthusiastic response and that the job was excellent for recent college graduates.
- The hotdoggers traditionally give out whistles shaped like the Wienermobile; the first was distributed in 1951.
- Country music singer Julie Roberts will be on hand to show the contestants how it's done, and Wienermobile drivers, called hotdoggers, will be giving out hot dogs and wiener whistles.
- The hotdoggers also got 40 hours of training on the Wienermobile under the supervision of the Madison police.
OriginLate 19th century: originally US college slang, probably influenced by a popular belief that the sausages contained dog meat. Definition of hot dog in US English: hot dognounˈhɑ(d) ˌdɑɡˈhä(d) ˌdäɡ 1A frankfurter, especially one served hot in a long, soft roll and topped with various condiments. Example sentencesExamples - If you don't like the two main entrées and are tired of hamburgers and hot dogs, we serve an outstanding broiled chicken twice a day.
- Fresh meat is lower in sodium than luncheon meat, bacon, hot dogs, sausage and ham.
- On Sundays, the bar opens its kitchen, serving burgers, hot dogs, and pizza.
- At lunchtime there is a poolside barbecue, at tea-time sandwiches and cake, and after hours a hot cabinet serving pizza and hot dogs with fried onions.
- The essence of baseball food is a bun-wrapped wiener - be it hot dog, bratwurst or sausage.
2North American informal A person who shows off, especially a skier or surfer who performs stunts or tricks. 〈北美,非正式〉(尤指滑雪者或冲浪者)表演特技(或花样)的人 Example sentencesExamples - And with spectacular past performances in hot dog waves as a guide - talent wise - Tim has what it takes to go wire-to-wire.
- The viewers in my house were all worried about redneck/macho reactions among competitors when Kobayashi first won the hot dog round and then went on to win the grand prize.
exclamationˈhɑ(d) ˌdɑɡˈhä(d) ˌdäɡ North American informal Used to express delight or enthusiastic approval. 〈北美,非正式〉 用于表示高兴或热切的赞同好极了 Hot dog! I've finally found something I can do that you can't Synonyms pose, strike an attitude, put on airs, attitudinize, behave affectedly, strut
verbˈhɑ(d) ˌdɑɡˈhä(d) ˌdäɡ North American informal no object Perform stunts or tricks; show off. 〈北美,非正式〉表演特技(或卖弄技巧) he chastised the dancers who'd been hotdogging 他斥责了卖弄技巧的舞蹈演员。
OriginLate 19th century: originally US college slang, probably influenced by a popular belief that the sausages contained dog meat. |