释义 |
clobber verb- to strike someone forcefully US, 1944
- For no reason they were going to clobber us. — Nat Hentoff, Jazz Country, p. 54, 1965
- [H]e could clobber some greedy local who got a bit cheeky up-country. — The Times Magazine, p. 24, 23 February 2002
- to criticise someone or something harshly UK, 1956
- Nothing else is clobbered like heavy metal[.] — Ask, p. 72, 8 May 1981
- in computing, to overwrite a program US
- — Eric S. Raymond, The New Hacker’s Dictionary, p. 96, 1991
- to impose an onerous duty or unwelcome burden on someone UK, 1984
Usually before “with;” for example, “I got clobbered with finishing the weeding.”
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