rat
Kelime Anlamı :

1. sıçan.
2. fare.
3. lağım faresi.
4. muhbir.
5. döneklik etmek.
6. hain.
7. ispiyoncu.
8. ratim.
9. ispiyonla.
10. rati.
Sahne Örnekleri :
Eş Anlamlı Kelimeler :
Tanımlar :
1. to catch or kill rats; follow the business of a ratter or rat-catcher.
2. to go over from one party or cause to another, especially from a party or cause that is losing or likely to lose, as rats run from a falling house; desert one's party or associates for advantage or gain; become a renegade.
3. to work for less than current wages, to refuse to strike with fellow-workmen, or to take the place of one who has struck: often with indefinite it. see rat, n., 5 .
4. to puff out (the hair) by means of a rat. see rat, n., 6.
5. to displace or supplant union workers in: as. to rat an office or a shop.
6. to tear.
7. A term of objurgation, used in the imperative.
8. A middle english contracted form of redeth, the third person singular present indicative of read.
9. A rodent of some of the larger species of the genus mus, as M. rattus, the black rat, and M. decumanus, the gray, brown, or norway rat: distinguished from mouse.
10. any rodent of the family Muridæ; a murine; in the plural, the Muridæ.
11. any rodent of the suborder Myomorpha.
12. some other rodent, or some insectivore, marsupial, or other animal like or likened to a rat.
13. A person who is considered to act in some respect in a manner characteristic of rats: so called in opprobrium.
14. A workman who accepts lower wages than those current at the time and place or required by an authorized scale, or one who takes a position vacated by a striker, or one who refuses to strike when others do.
15. A clergyman: so called in contempt.
16. something suggesting the idea of a rat, as a curving roll of stuffed cloth or of crimped hair-work, with tapering ends, formerly (about 1860–70) and still occasionally used by women to puff out the hair, which was turned over it.
17. same as bandicoot, 2.
18. A rag; tatter.
19. plural an exclamation used to indicate incredulity or ironical disagreement with a statement; humbug.
from The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia