chaser

Εννοια (Αγγλικός)

  1. Something or someone who chases.
  2. A horse trained for steeplechasing; a steeplechaser.
  3. (obsolete) A hunter (a horse bred and trained for use in hunting).
  4. (slang) A drink consumed after another of a different kind.
  5. (obsolete) Someone who follows logs out of the forest in order to signal a yarder engineer to stop them if they become fouled
  6. One who unhooks chokers from the logs at the landing.
  7. (obsolete, slang) A piece of music played after a performance while the audience leaves.
  8. A long piece of flexible wire used to draw an electrical cable through a wall cavity.
  9. One of a series of adjacent light bulbs that cycle on and off to give the illusion of movement.
  10. A person who guards military prisoners on fatigue duty; a prison guard.
  11. (slang) A person who is attracted to and seeks out sexual partners with a particular quality, usually in a fetishistic manner.
  12. (slang) A person who is attracted to and seeks out sexual partners with a particular quality, usually in a fetishistic manner.
  13. (slang) A person who is attracted to and seeks out sexual partners with a particular quality, usually in a fetishistic manner.
  14. (Harry-Potter) In the sport of Quidditch or Muggle quidditch, a player responsible for passing the quaffle and scoring goals with it.
  15. Any dragonfly of family Libellulidae.

Έννοιες

διορατικότητα

διώκτης

Μεταφράσεις

Συχνότητα

C2
Προφέρεται ως (IPA)
/ˈtʃeɪsə/
Ετυμολογία (Αγγλικός)

In summary

Inherited from Middle English chaser, chacer, chasour, borrowed from Old French chaceür, chaceor, from chacier (“to chase, hunt”); later senses from or influenced by chase (“pursue”) + -er. Doublet of chasseur.

Βελτιώστε την προφορά σας

Notes

Sign in to write sticky notes