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单词 toady
释义

Definition of toady in English:

toady

nounPlural toadies ˈtəʊdiˈtoʊdi
  • 1A person who behaves obsequiously to someone important.

    谄媚者,马屁精

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Radio stations lend their microphones to these degenerate rappers who start wars on the air that end up affecting all their sycophants, toadies and lackeys who want to keep it real.
    • The Chief Coroner could be simply a toady for the department.
    • She would show Lord William that she was not about to turn into a weepy-faced toady over him.
    • The central development of Cromwell from a timid toady to a towering tyrant is well depicted.
    • He was a shameless toady to those above him and a vicious bully to those below him.
    • He may have signed off on the idea of creating a youth brigade, and put a gold star in the dossier of the sweating toady who proposed the idea.
    • ‘Your little toadies seem a bit pusillanimous,’ she observed laconically, curious to see if he was as smart as they said he was.
    • Others claimed that he had improperly mixed religion and politics and had served as a toady of Prime Minister José María Aznar.
    • He calls it a ‘parasite’, which she learned in school is usually defined as a hanger-on, a toady, a sycophant.
    • ‘People think us security guards are just stupid, unfeeling corporate toadies, but that's not true,’ he said.
    • I admit he can be fearfully blunt at times, but surely that's better than being a toady?
    • The principal and her toadies made it seem that our opinions were important and that the reorganisation would not happen if we were dead set against it.
    • Never has America been so thoroughly in the clutches of fawners, lap dogs, toadies, boot lickers, lick spittles, and Snopses.
    • Mere subordination is unamusing, and we have a vocabulary that allows us to express our disapproval of people whose aim is nothing else but to please - toady, creep, sycophant, etc., are the correlates of the bully.
    • Should I make some amusing reference to a recent out-of-school meeting, or will the teacher think I'm a toady?
    • He was grinning with the expectant air of an ambitious toady as he balanced on his tiptoes.
    • Conversely, but equally false, is the image of a toady who curries favor from higher-ups or someone who twists selfsacrifice into a self-serving art form.
    • Imagine that you and your neighbours have just elected a diverse group of community activists to your city council and school board, tossing out an arrogant clique of corporate toadies in the process.
    • You know, the all too familiar signs of smugness, ingratiating habits, or simply the false earnestness and self-satisfaction associated with a testosterone-powered toady.
    • This was a man so obviously lying to himself and others - so obviously acting a part - that not even the toadies and sycophants lined beaming along the front row of the hall could have believed a word of it.
    Synonyms
    sycophant, obsequious person, creep, crawler, fawner, flatterer, flunkey, lackey, truckler, groveller, doormat, lickspittle, kowtower, minion, hanger-on, leech, puppet, stooge, spaniel, Uriah Heep
    informal bootlicker, yes-man
    vulgar slang arse-licker, arse-kisser
    British vulgar slang bum-sucker
    North American vulgar slang brown-nose, suckhole
  • 2Australian A pufferfish.

verbtoadying, toadied, toadies ˈtəʊdiˈtoʊdi
[no object]
  • Act in an obsequious way.

    拍马,奉承,谄媚

    she imagined him toadying to his rich clients

    她想像他正对他那些有钱的客户溜须拍马。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Pushing for direct links amounts to toadying to capitalists intent on exploiting the China market, and risks the future of this nation's workers.
    • Even by the standards of the Victorians, who had a pretty high tolerance level for toadying, this is slimy stuff.
    • He describes the inner workings of the Persian court where fear of and toadying to the king predominated and how that affected the campaign against Greece.
    • The modern free-verse poet Ezra Pound toadied to Mussolini.
    • By toadying to the royal family of Crim Tartary, she was lady-in-waiting to the young Princess Angelica.
    • He has toadied to those, including the Queen, whose affection for him cannot be relied on to last longer than next week's polls.
    • Democracy is not well served by this deliberate polarization of issues, or by toadying to it.
    • If they were, he would have toadied to them on Kyoto.
    • The Beard Liberation Front is not doing itself, or its cause, any favours by toadying to those who lack the conviction to sprout a decent set of whiskers and grow the full monty.
    • He will win no plaudits for toadying to London and he has no future in Westminster anyway.
    • He humiliated and cheated the poor peasants, while toadying to landlords and potentates.
    • How very Scottish not to want to be seen toadying up to someone else's company in public.
    • Accused of being ‘unprincipled’ by an editor, he replied: ‘I have never toadied, nor lied, nor insulted.’
    • His life is a series of bureaucratic hurdles and toadying.
    • After a career spent shamelessly toadying to corporate interests, I will spend my retirement feeding the homeless.
    • They reckoned it would be quite fatal for their credibility, toadying up to politicians.
    • Imagine a dealer who regarded art education with suspicion, never toadied to museum poobahs, and refused to label any painting or sculpture a ‘smart buy.’
    • Being good at service means that we are servile and toadying and demeans our noble island spirit.
    • It's a story about jealous and weak leaders toadying up to the current world power to effect the destruction of a source of truth who is troubling their comfort zone.
    Synonyms
    be obsequious towards, be servile towards, be sycophantic towards, grovel to, kowtow to, abase oneself to, demean oneself to, bow and scrape to, prostrate oneself to, truckle to, make up to, play up to, dance attendance on, fawn on, ingratiate oneself with, rub up the right way, curry favour with, flatter, court
    informal suck up to, crawl to, creep to, be all over, lick someone's boots, fall all over, butter up, keep someone sweet
    North American brown-nose
    vulgar slang lick/kiss someone's arse

Derivatives

  • toadyish

  • adjective
    • Plus citing Authorities in the very first sentence just feels so very toadyish.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • But the government's toadyish diplomacy, which overlooked the key issue affecting its relations with North Korea, led to a delay in resolving the abduction cases and resulted in tragic consequences.
      • But I doubt if even the most toadyish East European regime would be willing to accept serious casualties.
      • If that sounds toadyish, just take a look at two of its newest titles.
      • That angered even his normally toadyish interviewer.
  • toadyism

  • noun ˈtəʊdɪɪz(ə)mˈtoʊdiˌɪzəm
    • It lays out, with fierce irony and escalating desperation, the horrors of the nuclear reactor meltdown at Chernobyl and the buck-passing perfected by a system aimed at ‘inculcating industriousness (somewhat successfully), obedience (fairly successfully) and toadyism (very successfully).’
      Example sentencesExamples
      • These two behaviors of subordination and aggressive domination, toadyism and the symbolic rape of reputations, are referred to here in their most extreme form.
      • The not-so-little secret is that indecisions are often more frequently rewarded at the workplace than decisions, joining the litany of office-sanctioned bad behaviors that include toadyism, hissy-fits, and frat-house machismo.
      • As the pressures have increased, toadyism has increased.
      • The failed March First Movement taught us that in order to win our fight for independence and freedom, we must have effective revolutionary leadership and organizational structures; we must use the right tactics and strategies; and we must debunk toadyism and build up our strength on our own.

Origin

Early 19th century: said to be a contraction of toad-eater, a charlatan's assistant who ate toads; toads were regarded as poisonous, and the assistant's survival was thought to be due to the efficacy of the charlatan's remedy.

  • In the 17th century unscrupulous charlatans and quacks would try to sell their supposed remedies by demonstrating their powers. One technique was to have an assistant take the quack medicine and then eat, or pretend to eat, a toad—people thought that toads were poisonous and so were likely to attribute the assistant's survival to the charlatan's wares. Such an assistant was a toad-eater. In the 18th century the word also came to mean ‘a fawning flatterer’, and in the early 19th this was shortened to toady. Toad is an Old English word, and toadstool late Middle English apparently from the plant being the right size and shape to be a toad's stool.

Rhymes

Jodie, roadie, tody

Definition of toady in US English:

toady

nounˈtoʊdiˈtōdē
  • A person who behaves obsequiously to someone important.

    谄媚者,马屁精

    Example sentencesExamples
    • ‘People think us security guards are just stupid, unfeeling corporate toadies, but that's not true,’ he said.
    • This was a man so obviously lying to himself and others - so obviously acting a part - that not even the toadies and sycophants lined beaming along the front row of the hall could have believed a word of it.
    • Others claimed that he had improperly mixed religion and politics and had served as a toady of Prime Minister José María Aznar.
    • You know, the all too familiar signs of smugness, ingratiating habits, or simply the false earnestness and self-satisfaction associated with a testosterone-powered toady.
    • Should I make some amusing reference to a recent out-of-school meeting, or will the teacher think I'm a toady?
    • Never has America been so thoroughly in the clutches of fawners, lap dogs, toadies, boot lickers, lick spittles, and Snopses.
    • Mere subordination is unamusing, and we have a vocabulary that allows us to express our disapproval of people whose aim is nothing else but to please - toady, creep, sycophant, etc., are the correlates of the bully.
    • She would show Lord William that she was not about to turn into a weepy-faced toady over him.
    • The principal and her toadies made it seem that our opinions were important and that the reorganisation would not happen if we were dead set against it.
    • The central development of Cromwell from a timid toady to a towering tyrant is well depicted.
    • He may have signed off on the idea of creating a youth brigade, and put a gold star in the dossier of the sweating toady who proposed the idea.
    • I admit he can be fearfully blunt at times, but surely that's better than being a toady?
    • He was a shameless toady to those above him and a vicious bully to those below him.
    • He calls it a ‘parasite’, which she learned in school is usually defined as a hanger-on, a toady, a sycophant.
    • The Chief Coroner could be simply a toady for the department.
    • Radio stations lend their microphones to these degenerate rappers who start wars on the air that end up affecting all their sycophants, toadies and lackeys who want to keep it real.
    • ‘Your little toadies seem a bit pusillanimous,’ she observed laconically, curious to see if he was as smart as they said he was.
    • Conversely, but equally false, is the image of a toady who curries favor from higher-ups or someone who twists selfsacrifice into a self-serving art form.
    • Imagine that you and your neighbours have just elected a diverse group of community activists to your city council and school board, tossing out an arrogant clique of corporate toadies in the process.
    • He was grinning with the expectant air of an ambitious toady as he balanced on his tiptoes.
    Synonyms
    sycophant, obsequious person, creep, crawler, fawner, flatterer, flunkey, lackey, truckler, groveller, doormat, lickspittle, kowtower, minion, hanger-on, leech, puppet, stooge, spaniel, uriah heep
verbˈtoʊdiˈtōdē
[no object]
  • Act in an obsequious way.

    拍马,奉承,谄媚

    she imagined him toadying to his rich clients

    她想像他正对他那些有钱的客户溜须拍马。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Accused of being ‘unprincipled’ by an editor, he replied: ‘I have never toadied, nor lied, nor insulted.’
    • Being good at service means that we are servile and toadying and demeans our noble island spirit.
    • The Beard Liberation Front is not doing itself, or its cause, any favours by toadying to those who lack the conviction to sprout a decent set of whiskers and grow the full monty.
    • How very Scottish not to want to be seen toadying up to someone else's company in public.
    • After a career spent shamelessly toadying to corporate interests, I will spend my retirement feeding the homeless.
    • Imagine a dealer who regarded art education with suspicion, never toadied to museum poobahs, and refused to label any painting or sculpture a ‘smart buy.’
    • He humiliated and cheated the poor peasants, while toadying to landlords and potentates.
    • Even by the standards of the Victorians, who had a pretty high tolerance level for toadying, this is slimy stuff.
    • He describes the inner workings of the Persian court where fear of and toadying to the king predominated and how that affected the campaign against Greece.
    • If they were, he would have toadied to them on Kyoto.
    • His life is a series of bureaucratic hurdles and toadying.
    • Pushing for direct links amounts to toadying to capitalists intent on exploiting the China market, and risks the future of this nation's workers.
    • He has toadied to those, including the Queen, whose affection for him cannot be relied on to last longer than next week's polls.
    • He will win no plaudits for toadying to London and he has no future in Westminster anyway.
    • Democracy is not well served by this deliberate polarization of issues, or by toadying to it.
    • They reckoned it would be quite fatal for their credibility, toadying up to politicians.
    • The modern free-verse poet Ezra Pound toadied to Mussolini.
    • By toadying to the royal family of Crim Tartary, she was lady-in-waiting to the young Princess Angelica.
    • It's a story about jealous and weak leaders toadying up to the current world power to effect the destruction of a source of truth who is troubling their comfort zone.
    Synonyms
    be obsequious towards, be servile towards, be sycophantic towards, grovel to, kowtow to, abase oneself to, demean oneself to, bow and scrape to, prostrate oneself to, truckle to, make up to, play up to, dance attendance on, fawn on, ingratiate oneself with, rub up the right way, curry favour with, flatter, court

Origin

Early 19th century: said to be a contraction of toad-eater, a charlatan's assistant who ate toads; toads were regarded as poisonous, and the assistant's survival was thought to be due to the efficacy of the charlatan's remedy.

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更新时间:2024/11/11 8:42:54