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 rout [raut]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 溃败, 大败, 乌合之众, 盛大晚会

vt. 使溃败, 使败逃, 打垮, 用鼻拱, 挖起, 搜, 唤起

vi. 用鼻拱地, 搜

[法] 聚众骚扰, 骚动, 聚众闹事




    rout


    Rout \Rout\ (rout), v. i. [AS. hr[=u]tan.]
    To roar; to bellow; to snort; to snore loudly. [Obs. or
    Scot.] --Chaucer.


    Rout \Rout\, n.
    A bellowing; a shouting; noise; clamor; uproar; disturbance;
    tumult. --Shak.

    This new book the whole world makes such a rout about.
    --Sterne.

    ``My child, it is not well,'' I said,
    ``Among the graves to shout;
    To laugh and play among the dead,
    And make this noisy rout.'' --Trench.


    Rout \Rout\, v. t. [A variant of root.]
    To scoop out with a gouge or other tool; to furrow.

    {To rout out}
    (a) To turn up to view, as if by rooting; to discover; to
    find.
    (b) To turn out by force or compulsion; as, to rout people
    out of bed. [Colloq.]


    Rout \Rout\, v. i.
    To search or root in the ground, as a swine. --Edwards.


    Rout \Rout\, n. [OF. route, LL. rupta, properly, a breaking, fr.
    L. ruptus, p. p. of rumpere to break. See {Rupture}, {reave},
    and cf. {Rote} repetition of forms, {Route}. In some senses
    this word has been confused with rout a bellowing, an
    uproar.] [Formerly spelled also {route}.]
    1. A troop; a throng; a company; an assembly; especially, a
    traveling company or throng. [Obs.] ``A route of ratones
    [rats].'' --Piers Plowman. ``A great solemn route.''
    --Chaucer.

    And ever he rode the hinderest of the route.
    --Chaucer.

    A rout of people there assembled were. --Spenser.

    2. A disorderly and tumultuous crowd; a mob; hence, the
    rabble; the herd of common people.

    the endless routs of wretched thralls. --Spenser.

    The ringleader and head of all this rout. --Shak.

    Nor do I name of men the common rout. --Milton.

    3. The state of being disorganized and thrown into confusion;
    -- said especially of an army defeated, broken in pieces,
    and put to flight in disorder or panic; also, the act of
    defeating and breaking up an army; as, the rout of the
    enemy was complete.

    thy army . . .
    Dispersed in rout, betook them all to fly. --Daniel.

    To these giad conquest, murderous rout to those.
    --pope.

    4. (Law) A disturbance of the peace by persons assembled
    together with intent to do a thing which, if executed,
    would make them rioters, and actually making a motion
    toward the executing thereof. --Wharton.

    5. A fashionable assembly, or large evening party. ``At routs
    and dances.'' --Landor.

    {To put to rout}, to defeat and throw into confusion; to
    overthrow and put to flight.


    Rout \Rout\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Routed}; p. pr. & vb. n.
    {Routing}.]
    To break the ranks of, as troops, and put them to flight in
    disorder; to put to rout.

    That party . . . that charged the Scots, so totally
    routed and defeated their whole army, that they fied.
    --Clarendon.

    Syn: To defeat; discomfit; overpower; overthrow.


    Rout \Rout\, v. i.
    To assemble in a crowd, whether orderly or disorderly; to
    collect in company. [obs.] --Bacon.

    In all that land no Christian[s] durste route.
    --Chaucer.

    1. As a consequence, the blue chips extended a decline which had begun in the closing minutes of the previous session, when investors had sensed the bad news to come. However, the downturn paled when compared with the rout in bonds.
    2. Traders said share prices continued a rout that began Monday on currency and other worries stirred by increasing tensions in the Middle East.
    3. Despite these gains, Macy bonds have yet to recover fully from the rout that took place earlier in the week.
    4. The rout came after a weekend meeting of finance ministers and central bankers from the major industrialized nations.
    5. A military rout was presented within Iraq as a David-like defiance of the western imperialist Goliath. Saddam's survival continues to baffle western governments, though not the people of Iraq.
    6. The stock market's rout last week may signal opportunity, according to W. Parker Hall III, the new manager of Vanguard U.S. Growth Portfolio.
    7. J Sainsbury's price offensive threatens to turn the food retailers' stock market retreat into a rout.
    8. This reduced estimate contributed to a rout in an already-weak commodities market.
    9. Advice to the pursued: Learn the fast break or suffer a rout.
    10. This year, a squeaker by Mr. MacKay combined with a rout of Mr. Dukakis might convince a few more Democrats that their problem is more than lousy advertising, the personality of their candidate or a "negative" campaign.
    11. The other was that, for the first quarter, it looked as though the rout would go in the other direction.
    12. Not even the stock market rout, which should have been good news for municipals, produced a flush of cash.
    13. Despite the market's rout, the common stock price rose 25 cents to close at $40 a share in Big Board composite trading.
    14. That's because, explains Ron Walters, a political science professor at Howard University, the problem is "entrenched attitudes and an entrenched culture that you're not going to rout out by marching."
    15. And when trading in the Chicago Merc's stock-index futures had finally halted for the day as well, sell orders cascaded onto the floor of the New York Stock Exchange, adding to the rout.
    16. If the plan to prevent a collapse of the local stock-index futures market hadn't been released before the market reopened, a plunge probably could have been a total rout, according to analysts.
    17. For investors from Wall Street to the West Coast, Friday's market rout was a stunning experience.
    18. Meanwhile, some technical analysts say indicators of the market's mood make a rally more likely than a rout.
    19. The governor's rout in the abortion session was reminiscent of a similar drubbing he took in efforts to pass a tax on services.
    20. Harry Truman did not rout the me-too Republicans by moving to the center; he moved left, positioning himself against the "do-nothing Congress."
    21. In August, the slowdown in stock fund sales seems to have turned into a rout.
    22. The United States has grown increasingly concerned with the Mujahedeen's failure to rout the Soviet-installed government of President Najibullah, contrary to American predictions of victory following the Soviets' pullout.
    23. The stock market steadied today after Monday's rout and blue chips got a lift from a rally in oil issues.
    24. A weak opening for the Toronto market turned into a rout later as the program selling in New York sparked a freefall in share prices.
    25. The dollar's rout shattered the optimistic tone the finance ministers hoped to impart in their first high-level discussions since the Oct. 19 stock market collapse.
    26. In yesterday's market rout, its shares closed down $6 at $17.50 in composite New York Stock Exchange trading.
    27. The move in Japan's discount rate came despite a rout in the Japanese stock market, where the Nikkei index of major stocks has fallen more than 20% this year.
    28. Conventional wisdom had been that prices would rise once fighting broke out, but the markets soon seemed to assume the conflict would be a rout and the flow of oil from the Middle East, especially from Saudi Arabia, would go unchecked.
    29. Treasury bonds recouped a little lost ground after Monday's rout, but the rally in stocks faded late in the session.
    30. But as the retreat became a rout, the mood turned cheery.
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