noun ˈhɒtspəːˈhɒtspəˈhɑtspər
archaic A rash, impetuous person.
〈古〉鲁莽之人
Example sentencesExamples
- On the one hand, planters have been depicted as perennial hotspurs - hard drinking, fast-living men whose hair-trigger tempers demonstrated little foresight and generated even less systematic thought.
- Even Rotary flourishes primarily as a Cause, as another opportunity for the Southerner to puff and prance and be a noble hotspur.
- The King's lunacy had in the meanwhile become so manifest that Prince William had to be installed as prince regent; the royal power was now in the hands of a tractable adherent of the aristocratic clique and of the military hotspurs.
Origin
Late Middle English: literally 'a person whose spur is hot from rash or constant riding'.
proper nounˈhɒtspəˈhɒtspəːˈhɑtspər
the nickname of Sir Henry Percy (see Percy, Sir Henry)
nounˈhätspərˈhɑtspər
archaic A rash, impetuous person.
〈古〉鲁莽之人
Example sentencesExamples
- Even Rotary flourishes primarily as a Cause, as another opportunity for the Southerner to puff and prance and be a noble hotspur.
- On the one hand, planters have been depicted as perennial hotspurs - hard drinking, fast-living men whose hair-trigger tempers demonstrated little foresight and generated even less systematic thought.
- The King's lunacy had in the meanwhile become so manifest that Prince William had to be installed as prince regent; the royal power was now in the hands of a tractable adherent of the aristocratic clique and of the military hotspurs.
Origin
Late Middle English: literally ‘a person whose spur is hot from rash or constant riding’.
proper nounˈhɑtspərˈhätspər
the nickname of Sir Henry Percy (see Percy, Sir Henry)