吓唬英语怎么说
- The scarecrows are for scaring away the birds.
- Many remedies are supposed to stip hiccups, such as scaring the person or having the person hold his nose while drinking water.
- Scaring us, seducing us, and misleading us - these strategies are all core parts of manufacturing demand.
- Once I got into the cab with a young lorry driver who careered along at 90mph to frighten other drivers, but I wasn't scared.
- He would never frighten anyone or cause them any harm.
- There is no greater thrill than to bluff a man, trap him, and outfox him.
- Halloween wasn't always so scary. It was once less about fright and more about flirtation.
- He knew that Soli was trying to frighten him, so he smiled to hide his fear.
- Sorry, I didn't mean to frighten you.
- I didn't mean to startle you.
- Infractions were added up, and at night he dispensed punishment, though rarely beyond a threatening voice or a scolding finger.
- They said they had driven off in their car, intending to scare him. But when they went back a short time later, the boy was gone.
- You mean to frighten me, Mr. Darcy, by coming in all this state to hear me?
- Don't try to frighten us with your technological worries.
- And I defy you to hurt him when I am by, and I defy you to frighten me!
- All this was just designed to frighten me and keep me in line.
- I could point at all those layoff statistics. Or I could frighten you by bringing up the specter of your job going overseas.
- In short, scaring your employees is a great way to get their attention.
- Emily had always been able to bluff Henry.
- The threat turned out to be a bluff. But her boldness was striking in a region where community activism can be a risky proposition.
- TO JUDGE by the way his bluff has just been called over Israeli settlements in the West Bank, Barack Obama is not a natural poker player.
- There is no greater thrill than to bluff a man, trap him and outfox him.
- In poker it is right and proper to bluff a friend out of the rewards of being dealt a good hand.
- I don't think he'll shoot—I think he's just bluffing.