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 jockey ['dʒɑkɪ]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 赛马骑师, 驾驶员, 操作工

vt. 骗, 瞒, 驾驶, 移动

vi. 当赛马的骑师




    jockey
    [ noun ]
    1. someone employed to ride horses in horse races

    2. <noun.person>
    3. an operator of some vehicle or machine or apparatus

    4. <noun.person>
      he's a truck jockey
      a computer jockey
      a disc jockey
    [ verb ]
    1. defeat someone through trickery or deceit

    2. <verb.competition> cheat chicane chouse screw shaft
    3. compete (for an advantage or a position)

    4. <verb.competition>
    5. ride a racehorse as a professional jockey

    6. <verb.competition>


    Jockey \Jock"ey\, n.; pl. {Jockeys}. [Dim. of Jack, Scot. Jock;
    orig., a boy who rides horses. See 2d {Jack}.]
    1. A professional rider of horses in races. --Addison.

    2. A dealer in horses; a horse trader. --Macaulay.

    3. A cheat; one given to sharp practice in trade.


    Jockey \Jock"ey\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Jockeyed}; p. pr. & vb.
    n. {Jockeying}.]
    1. `` To jostle by riding against one.'' --Johnson.

    2. To play the jockey toward; to cheat; to trick; to impose
    upon in trade; as, to jockey a customer.

    3. To maneuver; to move in an intricate manner so as to avoid
    obstacles; as, to jockey a large cabinet up a winding
    staircase.
    [PJC]


    Jockey \Jock"ey\, v. i.
    1. To play or act the jockey; to cheat.

    2. To maneuver oneself aggressivley or skillfully so as to
    achieve an advantage; as, he jockeyed himself into
    position to be noticed.
    [PJC]

    1. Variety writers and editors also coined the slang words "pushover," "payoff," "freeloader," "chick," "disk jockey" and "whodunit."
    2. Davis, who measured a mere 5-foot-6 and weighed not much more than a jockey, died Wednesday at 64. He was the last working vestige of old-time vaudeville as well as entertainment's Renaissance man.
    3. A Scottish disc jockey has found a wide audience playing her own brand of down-home music on public radio in, of all places, North Carolina.
    4. For 20 years, KUNM has featured "Freeform" broadcasting, an eclectic blend of music and cultural perspectives that one disk jockey describes as "anything from Mozart to Motown to high Andes folk music."
    5. A New York disc jockey claims the White House "acted very bizarrely" when his listeners took the advice of Sen. Alfonse D'Amato and called to complain about President Reagan's handling of the situation in Panama.
    6. Chris Martin, a suspended volunteer disk jockey, however, insists the study was bogus.
    7. They included the theme from the motion picture "Jaws." "I just wanted to give them something to think about," laughed disc jockey Barry Scot of WWUS radio, which sponsored the festival to educate divers about reef protecton and conservation.
    8. More than 1,100 anti-nuclear protesters, including actress Teri Garr, actor Robert Blake, disc jockey Casey Kasem and activist Daniel Ellsberg were arrested Saturday at the nation's nuclear testing grounds.
    9. Many of its most loyal customers were from Trujillo, Honduras. The disk jockey played music ranging from salsa and reggae to the calypso popular on Honduras' Atlantic Coast.
    10. Several others told the station they'd tried, but failed, said disc jockey Paul Sutherland.
    11. Bobby Jay, a disc jockey for WCBS-FM, a New York "oldies" station, says many of his call-in requests for songs come from teen-agers.
    12. Jiles Perry Richardson Jr. gained fame in southeast Texas as a disc jockey in nearby Beaumont and as a club performer.
    13. What they do, that's their business." Disc jockey Paco Lopez has been working at a radio station here for only four months, so he had to do a stint on the graveyard shift.
    14. She grinned: "I just hope the results don't show that the only thing I'm qualified for is to be a jockey." Anti-union laws, Japanese work techniques and a scarcity of jobs have begun to transform Britain's once-militant labor unions.
    15. Pasok rivals jockey to succeed Papandreou, Page 3 The rebel Rwanda Patriotic Front and the country's recently installed interim government last night agreed to meet today under United Nations auspices to discuss a ceasefire in the civil war-torn nation.
    16. The disc jockey, Scruff Connors of CHTZ-FM in St. Catherines, Ontario, had to be hospitalized for exhaustion after he arrived in Portage two weeks ago to present the town with a new car.
    17. You can drink, dance or listen to a disc jockey at the Basix nightclub, but if you want to light a cigarette you've got to go outside.
    18. Rock disc jockey Casey Kasem, a Jackson supporter, filled the time while waiting for Jackson with an interview with a Jackson campaign official and video montages.
    19. Cleveland is where late-night disc jockey Alan Freed introduced a generation of teeny-boppers to the term rock 'n' roll.
    20. His biggest single payday came in 1980 at Waterford Park in Chester, W. Va., when he pocketed the jockey's 10% of a $25,000 purse aboard a horse named Flying Mars.
    21. On the program is entertainment by a chamber-music group, a five-piece dance band, a folk-dance troupe, a disk jockey and two masters of ceremonies.
    22. He has worked with improvisational comedy groups, worked as a disc jockey in college and played drums in several bands to help pay his way through school.
    23. Thriller writer Dick Francis, who was her jockey from 1953 to 1956, said in an interview, "She puts everyone she meets at their ease straight away and she's so knowledgeable about the things she's interested in, like racing.
    24. "I ride with my stirrups longer here, only partly because I'm taller than I was when I came over," says the 5-foot-6 jockey.
    25. Prince Charles, whose career as a steeplechase jockey ended several years ago in a series of spills, was not commenting on the drug findings.
    26. The club was a 50-by-75 foot T-shaped space partitioned into several rooms, with a bar at either side of the front entrance and a disc jockey's stand at the rear.
    27. They met in 1946 at radio station WHDH, where Elliott was a disc jockey and Goulding was a newscaster.
    28. Speaking of riddles, what do you get when you cross a mallard with a disc jockey and a cat?
    29. As part of a promotion drive, a disc jockey at radio station WZVU asked listeners for suggestions about what to do with the lace left over after he bought a new pair.
    30. The other concerns the 1984 slaying of San Francisco disc jockey Donald Guiletti.
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