请输入您要查询的英文单词:

 

单词 snoop
释义

Definition of snoop in English:

snoop

verb snuːpsnup
[no object]informal
  • Investigate or look around furtively in an attempt to find out something, especially information about someone's private affairs.

    窥探,打探(某事,尤指隐私)

    your sister might find the ring if she goes snooping about

    如果你姐姐四处打探一下,也许会找到戒指。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • When there's a guy who breaks into my business and snoops around without my permission, it gets pretty important to me!
    • While my sister was snooping in my room she spotted the Canada guide and asked if she could read it.
    • It's every parent's dream: a device for snooping on what teenagers get up to in the family car.
    • I catch her going through my drawers and backpack, and she snoops on my little brother even more, searching his room and listening to his phone conversations.
    • In the meantime, I suggest you stop snooping on what the neighbours are doing and tend to your own lives.
    • After snooping round the house for a bit, we rode our bikes back to the hotel.
    • The idea of the state snooping into the affairs of private citizens is anathema in a country which takes individual liberties seriously.
    • One of his agents is Jack who snoops about and pinpoints dangerous but valuable potential crimes.
    • This is why she shouldn't be snooping in my private letters, for crying out loud!
    • This isn't just a question of nosy politicians snooping on the citizens they are supposed to be representing.
    • There's no telling what he'll do when he snoops around my house and finds out what's really going on.
    • I left it in the middle of his bed knowing that he would know I snooped to find it, but I didn't care.
    • Protect your privacy and keep anyone from snooping into your information.
    • The idea of Government employees snooping through people's private records is one that will cause alarm.
    • This feature is basically a game wherein the viewer can snoop around Eddie's office and find all kinds of information about the production of the film.
    • Mom will probably look a little guilty and may admit she snooped.
    • It's when the media and the activists start snooping around that the problems start.
    • Does this involve snooping around company dustbins, intercepting illicit cargoes in high-speed chases?
    • And if it does know an intrusion occurred, the victim company ordinarily won't know whether the hacker just snooped around a little, or actually managed to see a lot.
    • Rather than snooping around and trying to retrieve it I thought it would be best to just own up and ask if you've seen it.
    Synonyms
    pry, enquire impertinently, be inquisitive (about), enquire, do some detective work
    be curious, poke about/around, mind someone else's business, be a busybody, nose into, stick/poke one's nose in/into
    interfere (in/with), meddle (in/with), intrude (on)
    informal be nosy (about), nosy
    Australian/New Zealand informal stickybeak
    investigate, explore, ferret (about/around) in, rummage in, search, delve into, peer into, prowl around, nose around/about/round, have a good look at
noun snuːpsnup
informal
  • 1A furtive investigation.

    I could go back to her cottage and have another snoop

    我可以回到她居住的村舍里再打探一次。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • And if the neighbour dares to try and poke his nose in, pretending to wish me many happy returns when all he really wants is a good snoop around, he'll wish he hadn't.
    Synonyms
    search, nose, look, prowl, ferret, poke, exploration, investigation
    1. 1.1 A person who furtively tries to find out information about someone's private affairs.
      窥探,打探(某事,尤指隐私)
      I start talking without admitting that I'm a professional snoop
      Example sentencesExamples
      • He knew he shouldn't look through it, and he wasn't a snoop at heart, but it was calling him.
      • Hiring a professional snoop is a good way to find out.
      • I hope he doesn't think I'm some kind of snoop for touching it.
      • Those punish snoops who pry into someone else's private affairs, anyone who publicly discloses embarrassing private facts, and publicity that shows someone in a false light.
      • And, as usual, the law is unlikely to catch the professional snoop.
      • They could have been hiding photos and mementos of her somewhere, but I just wasn't born to be a snoop.
      • I had a feeling you would look, you little snoop.
      • She didn't care that he was one of the cutest boys she'd ever seen, he was a nosy snoop and that was it!
      • That's when you catch the snoop in your rear-view mirror, methodically recording your license plate in a notepad.
      • My mother was a great snoop, she'd call it ‘cleaning up’ and I'd come home from a weekend at my Dad's to find she'd rifled through my things.
      • Your personal matters and movements are supposed to be just that - personal, beyond the reach of either government or corporate snoops.
      • But while Congress wants to shield citizens against government snoops, it has no such qualms when private companies collect the data.
      • I was about to open it, but I heard voices echoing up the stairs, and, not wanting to appear as a snoop, I rushed back into the living room.
      • After a quick reprimand and warning that Santa doesn't like snoops, the matter was dropped.
      • What I am saying is that if our personal information - some of it extraordinarily sensitive - is archived in corporate or government databases and protected only by the weak shield of the law, it's vulnerable to federal snoops.
      • You think she was stalling so the snoop could finish her job?
      • The blond cheerleader narrowed her eyes and then ignored the snoop.
      • That way, dutiful snoops can see if any of the hundreds of alien detainees in custody have ever purchased a firearm.
      • You're saying he was basically just being a snoop, and that's all there is to this?
      • That's what I get for being a snoop, I guess - and for being so clumsy.

Derivatives

  • snooper

  • nounˈsnuːpəˈsnupər
    informal
    • True the regime is snoopy and paranoid, but there is one perspective which should be taken into account by anybody who wants to start criticising them.
      Synonyms
      eavesdropper, pryer, interferer, meddler, busybody
      Example sentencesExamples
      • He is not a snoopy, self-righteous, trouble-making person.
      • Curious and snoopy, we all watched as they both got out of their cars.
  • snoopy

  • adjective
    informal
    • My parents aren't the snoopy, overbearing kind that stop by to check on your laundry technique.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • She looked about twenty something, about as old as Toni, only way too snoopy for her own good.
      • Curious and snoopy, we all watched as they both got out of their cars.
      • He is not a snoopy, self-righteous, trouble-making person.
      • True the regime is snoopy and paranoid, but there is one perspective which should be taken into account by anybody who wants to start criticising them.
      Synonyms
      eavesdropper, pryer, interferer, meddler, busybody
      investigative journalist
      investigator, detective, private detective, private investigator, operative
      British enquiry agent
      informal snoop, nosy parker, Paul Pry, private eye, PI, sleuth
      North American informal private dick, peeper, shamus, gumshoe
      Australian/New Zealand informal stickybeak
      informal, dated hawkshaw, sherlock
      North American dated Pinkerton

Origin

Mid 19th century: from Dutch snœpen 'eat on the sly'.

Rhymes

bloop, cock-a-hoop, coop, croup, droop, drupe, dupe, goop, group, Guadeloupe, hoop, loop, poop, recoup, roup, scoop, sloop, soup, stoep, stoop, stoup, stupe, swoop, troop, troupe, whoop

Definition of snoop in US English:

snoop

verbsno͞opsnup
[no object]informal
  • Investigate or look around furtively in an attempt to find out something, especially information about someone's private affairs.

    窥探,打探(某事,尤指隐私)

    your sister might find the ring if she goes snooping around

    如果你姐姐四处打探一下,也许会找到戒指。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • It's when the media and the activists start snooping around that the problems start.
    • I left it in the middle of his bed knowing that he would know I snooped to find it, but I didn't care.
    • The idea of the state snooping into the affairs of private citizens is anathema in a country which takes individual liberties seriously.
    • This feature is basically a game wherein the viewer can snoop around Eddie's office and find all kinds of information about the production of the film.
    • And if it does know an intrusion occurred, the victim company ordinarily won't know whether the hacker just snooped around a little, or actually managed to see a lot.
    • Rather than snooping around and trying to retrieve it I thought it would be best to just own up and ask if you've seen it.
    • When there's a guy who breaks into my business and snoops around without my permission, it gets pretty important to me!
    • There's no telling what he'll do when he snoops around my house and finds out what's really going on.
    • After snooping round the house for a bit, we rode our bikes back to the hotel.
    • In the meantime, I suggest you stop snooping on what the neighbours are doing and tend to your own lives.
    • This is why she shouldn't be snooping in my private letters, for crying out loud!
    • Does this involve snooping around company dustbins, intercepting illicit cargoes in high-speed chases?
    • One of his agents is Jack who snoops about and pinpoints dangerous but valuable potential crimes.
    • Protect your privacy and keep anyone from snooping into your information.
    • It's every parent's dream: a device for snooping on what teenagers get up to in the family car.
    • The idea of Government employees snooping through people's private records is one that will cause alarm.
    • While my sister was snooping in my room she spotted the Canada guide and asked if she could read it.
    • Mom will probably look a little guilty and may admit she snooped.
    • This isn't just a question of nosy politicians snooping on the citizens they are supposed to be representing.
    • I catch her going through my drawers and backpack, and she snoops on my little brother even more, searching his room and listening to his phone conversations.
    Synonyms
    pry, enquire impertinently, be inquisitive, be inquisitive about, enquire, do some detective work
    investigate, explore, ferret in, ferret about in, ferret around in, rummage in, search, delve into, peer into, prowl around, nose about, nose around, nose round, have a good look at
nounsno͞opsnup
informal
  • 1A furtive investigation.

    I could go back to her cottage and have another snoop

    我可以回到她居住的村舍里再打探一次。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • And if the neighbour dares to try and poke his nose in, pretending to wish me many happy returns when all he really wants is a good snoop around, he'll wish he hadn't.
    Synonyms
    search, nose, look, prowl, ferret, poke, exploration, investigation
    eavesdropper, pryer, interferer, meddler, busybody
    1. 1.1 A person who furtively tries to find out information about someone's private affairs.
      窥探,打探(某事,尤指隐私)
      Example sentencesExamples
      • You think she was stalling so the snoop could finish her job?
      • What I am saying is that if our personal information - some of it extraordinarily sensitive - is archived in corporate or government databases and protected only by the weak shield of the law, it's vulnerable to federal snoops.
      • That's what I get for being a snoop, I guess - and for being so clumsy.
      • I was about to open it, but I heard voices echoing up the stairs, and, not wanting to appear as a snoop, I rushed back into the living room.
      • I hope he doesn't think I'm some kind of snoop for touching it.
      • And, as usual, the law is unlikely to catch the professional snoop.
      • That way, dutiful snoops can see if any of the hundreds of alien detainees in custody have ever purchased a firearm.
      • Hiring a professional snoop is a good way to find out.
      • Those punish snoops who pry into someone else's private affairs, anyone who publicly discloses embarrassing private facts, and publicity that shows someone in a false light.
      • They could have been hiding photos and mementos of her somewhere, but I just wasn't born to be a snoop.
      • I had a feeling you would look, you little snoop.
      • You're saying he was basically just being a snoop, and that's all there is to this?
      • That's when you catch the snoop in your rear-view mirror, methodically recording your license plate in a notepad.
      • She didn't care that he was one of the cutest boys she'd ever seen, he was a nosy snoop and that was it!
      • But while Congress wants to shield citizens against government snoops, it has no such qualms when private companies collect the data.
      • After a quick reprimand and warning that Santa doesn't like snoops, the matter was dropped.
      • The blond cheerleader narrowed her eyes and then ignored the snoop.
      • My mother was a great snoop, she'd call it ‘cleaning up’ and I'd come home from a weekend at my Dad's to find she'd rifled through my things.
      • He knew he shouldn't look through it, and he wasn't a snoop at heart, but it was calling him.
      • Your personal matters and movements are supposed to be just that - personal, beyond the reach of either government or corporate snoops.

Origin

Mid 19th century: from Dutch snœpen ‘eat on the sly’.

随便看

 

英汉双解词典包含464360条英汉词条,基本涵盖了全部常用单词的翻译及用法,是英语学习的有利工具。

 

Copyright © 2004-2022 Newdu.com All Rights Reserved
更新时间:2024/9/19 9:37:52