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词汇 swagger
释义

Definition of swagger in English:

swagger

verb ˈswaɡəˈswæɡər
  • no object, with adverbial of direction Walk or behave in a very confident and arrogant or self-important way.

    昂首阔步;大摇大摆地走

    he swaggered along the corridor

    他沿着走廊大摇大摆地走。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • I was gathering my things when Skinner walked, no swaggered up to my locker and coolly kicked the left corner.
    • The Doctor walked - no, not walked, swaggered - over to me.
    • After a lot of tick-ticking from my bright orange watch, Tyler walked, no, swaggered over, brandishing a scrap of paper triumphantly.
    • With a propane tank over his shoulder and the little boy tugging at his arm, McCarthy swaggered towards the tracks.
    • There is no better way to relax than to watch a cat - sleeping, stretching, or swaggering along.
    • He swaggered as he walked towards her, then sat down on the bench.
    • An outsider can feel it too, when a soldier swaggers up to your vehicle and orders the bonnet to be opened.
    • And then staggered and swaggered along with Flint, Carl and TJ our way to Emma's for dinner and to meet Gina's brother Aubrey.
    • I just can't stand the man's style, the way he swaggers and struts and smirks and the way he looks sly and deceitful and the way Americans can't see it.
    • It's not just a question of how the president walks or swaggers or how he talks.
    • As they mooched off, one straggler swaggering along behind the others tried to do an oh-so-cool spit onto the grass.
    • The driver swaggers into the club and slaps Tony on the back.
    • He swaggers to the counter, orders, and waits for his drink.
    • Spike swaggers closer: I was only looking in the slayer's direction because you wouldn't give me the time of day.
    • As he swaggers into the Citizens' Theatre, the 24-year-old is in personal and professional rude health.
    • A flashily dressed man comes swaggering down the street, talking loudly into a mobile phone.
    • The way the leader swaggered around as he walked made me frown a little since I had seen people like him in almost every school I had attended.
    • He held this position for 10 seconds, after which he swaggered forth.
    • They strutted and swaggered in Creolestyle, played the hottest of jazz and slowed to a dead march as the tempo changed.
    • However, it is Ejiofor's film as he swaggers around in heels or confronts the ghosts of the past with equal aplomb.
    Synonyms
    strut, parade, stride, roll, prance
    walk confidently, walk arrogantly
    North American informal sashay
    archaic swash
    boast, brag, bray, bluster, crow, gloat, parade, strut, posture, pose, blow one's own trumpet, lord it
    informal show off, swank, play to the gallery
    literary rodomontade
noun ˈswaɡəˈswæɡər
  • A very confident and arrogant or self-important gait or manner.

    昂首阔步;神气活现

    they strolled around the camp with an exaggerated swagger

    他们在军营里四处夸张地神气活现地散步。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The Saints duly went marching in, although it was more of a triumphal swagger in the end, and it seemed that everyone in Paisley wanted to be in that number, which of course was one.
    • Either because it's the truth, or because he enjoys the macho swagger, he has said he feels sad when affairs come to an end but he insists his heart has never been broken.
    • There is something of an arrogant swagger about Ibrahimovic.
    • A goal ahead after four minutes, two up after 19, his players were coasting, and playing with the confident swagger of a team who knew it, when everything unravelled with alarming simplicity.
    • Episodic material consists of scales and arpeggios that enhance the music's powerful images - ocean swells, billowing sails, even a sea captain's swagger.
    • And with billions to spend, it gives them a certain swagger.
    • Taylor has become one of the vocal leaders of the Miami defense and shows the confident swagger of the great Hurricane defenders.
    • One exchange neatly sums up the swagger of the young, high, stupid and heavily armed.
    • Their backs when pushing forward had an arrogant swagger which comes with real talent.
    • Smit slowly walked back to his chair with an arrogant swagger.
    • As he twirls again, an officer's sword highlights the confident swagger of today's military man about town.
    • But while a swagger of smug certainty plays well on television, prudence might argue for an open mind and the occasional flicker of doubt.
    • Our sales hero comes alone, wielding an arrogant swagger.
    • More than the sum of her swagger, drawl and thousand nervous gestures, she embodies her character so seamlessly that the film's artifice seems to disappear.
    • He approached McGrath with a swagger and challenged him with the question, ‘Am I not the greatest bowler you've ever seen?’
    • Jason stepped down onto the garage floor, a confident swagger in his step.
    • Have we got what it takes to trip the loutish swagger of the Coalition's stormtroopers?
    • Nevertheless, he captures the music's masculine swagger right from the very first chord.
    • He saw enough in Hicks to remind him of the nihilistic swagger of Bruce.
    • After years of hard-earned success on Broadway, where audiences lapped up their chaotic, anything-goes approach, the brothers arrived in Hollywood with an arrogant swagger.
    Synonyms
    strut, parading, roll, prancing
    confidence, arrogance, self-assurance, show, ostentation
    boasting, bragging, bluster, bumptiousness, brashness, swashbuckling, vainglory, puffery
    informal showing off, swank
    literary braggadocio, rodomontade, gasconade
adjective ˈswaɡəˈswæɡər
  • 1attributive Denoting a coat or jacket cut with a loose flare from the shoulders.

    (外衣)下摆宽松的

  • 2British dated, informal Smart or fashionable.

    〈英,非正式,旧〉漂亮的;时髦的

    I'll take you somewhere swagger

    我带你到个时髦的地方去。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • No hint of eighteenth-century neo-Palladian swagger or its kitsch modern imitations.

Derivatives

  • swaggerer

  • noun ˈswaɡərəˈswæɡ(ə)rər
    • The new president of the company could hardly be described as a swaggerer or a posturer, and he won't be making any idle threats about strike action.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • We need a few more swaggerers like Andrew Carnegie, the Marquis of Bute, or Sir Charles Tennant, all Scots who built great industrial empires and made certain that the world knew all about it.
      • He will never give up his chewing tobacco and spittoon, according to an insider, although he is said to be a Virginia gentleman rather than a Texas swaggerer.
      • Macaulay dismissed him as a drunken swaggerer.
      • Back in 1956 Jonathan Flynn was a hard-drinking young swaggerer and self-proclaimed Next Great American Poet.
  • swaggeringly

  • adverbˈswaɡərɪŋliˈswæɡ(ə)rɪŋli
    • But these last two points are faults of the plays, not the production, which at its best is a breathlessly pell-mell, swaggeringly epic dose of theatre.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • During imperial times, that archetypal native, John Bull, was swaggeringly sure of himself: common sense told this true-born Englishman that he was a representative of a large empire.
      • It was the schoolboy's dream, humiliating England, swaggeringly and insouciantly triumphant.

Origin

Early 16th century: apparently a frequentative of the verb swag.

  • A bulging bag is the link between swagger and swag (Middle English). This is what swag originally meant, and it later led to the word being used as a verb in the sense ‘to make something sway or sag’. Swagger appears to have developed from this, expressing the idea of walking or behaving arrogantly or self-importantly. By the late 18th century the ‘bulging bag’ meaning of swag had come to be applied to a thief's booty. It also came to refer to a bundle of personal belongings carried by a traveller in the Australian bush.

Rhymes

blagger, bragger, dagger, flagger, Jagger, lagger, nagger, quagga, saggar, stagger

Definition of swagger in US English:

swagger

verbˈswæɡərˈswaɡər
  • no object, with adverbial of direction Walk or behave in a very confident and typically arrogant or aggressive way.

    昂首阔步;大摇大摆地走

    he swaggered along the corridor

    他沿着走廊大摇大摆地走。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • After a lot of tick-ticking from my bright orange watch, Tyler walked, no, swaggered over, brandishing a scrap of paper triumphantly.
    • And then staggered and swaggered along with Flint, Carl and TJ our way to Emma's for dinner and to meet Gina's brother Aubrey.
    • It's not just a question of how the president walks or swaggers or how he talks.
    • As they mooched off, one straggler swaggering along behind the others tried to do an oh-so-cool spit onto the grass.
    • I was gathering my things when Skinner walked, no swaggered up to my locker and coolly kicked the left corner.
    • However, it is Ejiofor's film as he swaggers around in heels or confronts the ghosts of the past with equal aplomb.
    • The Doctor walked - no, not walked, swaggered - over to me.
    • He swaggers to the counter, orders, and waits for his drink.
    • The way the leader swaggered around as he walked made me frown a little since I had seen people like him in almost every school I had attended.
    • As he swaggers into the Citizens' Theatre, the 24-year-old is in personal and professional rude health.
    • An outsider can feel it too, when a soldier swaggers up to your vehicle and orders the bonnet to be opened.
    • Spike swaggers closer: I was only looking in the slayer's direction because you wouldn't give me the time of day.
    • A flashily dressed man comes swaggering down the street, talking loudly into a mobile phone.
    • He swaggered as he walked towards her, then sat down on the bench.
    • There is no better way to relax than to watch a cat - sleeping, stretching, or swaggering along.
    • He held this position for 10 seconds, after which he swaggered forth.
    • I just can't stand the man's style, the way he swaggers and struts and smirks and the way he looks sly and deceitful and the way Americans can't see it.
    • They strutted and swaggered in Creolestyle, played the hottest of jazz and slowed to a dead march as the tempo changed.
    • The driver swaggers into the club and slaps Tony on the back.
    • With a propane tank over his shoulder and the little boy tugging at his arm, McCarthy swaggered towards the tracks.
    Synonyms
    strut, parade, stride, roll, prance
    boast, brag, bray, bluster, crow, gloat, parade, strut, posture, pose, blow one's own trumpet, lord it
nounˈswæɡərˈswaɡər
  • A very confident and typically arrogant or aggressive gait or manner.

    昂首阔步;大摇大摆地走

    they strolled around the camp with an exaggerated swagger

    他们在军营里四处夸张地神气活现地散步。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • He saw enough in Hicks to remind him of the nihilistic swagger of Bruce.
    • The Saints duly went marching in, although it was more of a triumphal swagger in the end, and it seemed that everyone in Paisley wanted to be in that number, which of course was one.
    • Taylor has become one of the vocal leaders of the Miami defense and shows the confident swagger of the great Hurricane defenders.
    • More than the sum of her swagger, drawl and thousand nervous gestures, she embodies her character so seamlessly that the film's artifice seems to disappear.
    • Their backs when pushing forward had an arrogant swagger which comes with real talent.
    • Either because it's the truth, or because he enjoys the macho swagger, he has said he feels sad when affairs come to an end but he insists his heart has never been broken.
    • Episodic material consists of scales and arpeggios that enhance the music's powerful images - ocean swells, billowing sails, even a sea captain's swagger.
    • Have we got what it takes to trip the loutish swagger of the Coalition's stormtroopers?
    • One exchange neatly sums up the swagger of the young, high, stupid and heavily armed.
    • Our sales hero comes alone, wielding an arrogant swagger.
    • A goal ahead after four minutes, two up after 19, his players were coasting, and playing with the confident swagger of a team who knew it, when everything unravelled with alarming simplicity.
    • There is something of an arrogant swagger about Ibrahimovic.
    • Nevertheless, he captures the music's masculine swagger right from the very first chord.
    • Jason stepped down onto the garage floor, a confident swagger in his step.
    • After years of hard-earned success on Broadway, where audiences lapped up their chaotic, anything-goes approach, the brothers arrived in Hollywood with an arrogant swagger.
    • Smit slowly walked back to his chair with an arrogant swagger.
    • As he twirls again, an officer's sword highlights the confident swagger of today's military man about town.
    • But while a swagger of smug certainty plays well on television, prudence might argue for an open mind and the occasional flicker of doubt.
    • And with billions to spend, it gives them a certain swagger.
    • He approached McGrath with a swagger and challenged him with the question, ‘Am I not the greatest bowler you've ever seen?’
    Synonyms
    strut, parading, roll, prancing
    boasting, bragging, bluster, bumptiousness, brashness, swashbuckling, vainglory, puffery
adjectiveˈswæɡərˈswaɡər
  • attributive Denoting a coat or jacket cut with a loose flare from the shoulders.

    (外衣)下摆宽松的

Origin

Early 16th century: apparently a frequentative of the verb swag.

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