词组 | smoke out |
释义 | Idiom smoke someone or something out Theme: REVELATION to force someone or something out (of something), perhaps with smoke. (In cowboy or gangster talk this refers to the smoke from gunfire.)There was a mouse in the attic, but I smoked it out.The sheriff and the deputies smoked out the bank robbers. Idiom smoke outsmoke (someone) out to force someone to stop hiding.He didn't just walk into the police station and surrender, we had to smoke him out of hiding.To prevent such attacks, you have to smoke out the bad guys before they reach their targets. Phr V smoke out smokes, smoking, smoked smoke out sb/sth or smoke sb/sth out to force a person or animal to come out of a place by filling it with smokeIf any are left in the forest, they're usually smoked out. smoke out sb or smoke sb out to succeed in finding someone who is causing a problemThe finance minister has announced a tougher approach to smoking out tax dodgers. smoke out 1. smoke out sb • smoke sb out to discover who is causing a problem and force them to make themselves known: The McCarthy trials were intended to smoke out Communist sympathizers and enemy agents.2. smoke out sb/sth • smoke sb/sth out to force a person or animal to come out of a place by filling it with smoke: When the honey is ready, beekeepers smoke out the bees and remove the honeycombs from the hive. 1. smoke out sb • smoke sb out to discover who is causing a problem and force them to make themselves known: The McCarthy trials were intended to smoke out Communist sympathizers and enemy agents.2. smoke out sb/sth • smoke sb/sth out to force a person or animal to come out of a place by filling it with smoke: When the honey is ready, beekeepers smoke out the bees and remove the honeycombs from the hive. smoke out1. Literally, to fill a space with smoke to force a person or animal out of hiding. A noun or pronoun can be used between "smoke" and "out." The terrorists are in the center of the building, and will surely kill any officers who try to enter. I think our best bet is to try to smoke them out. Back on the farm, we used to smoke out rats by running a hose from the exhaust pipe of our pickup truck into their nest. 2. To expose someone or something and bring it to the attention of the public. A noun or pronoun can be used between "smoke" and "out." We were able to smoke the crooked cop out by hiding a microphone in the back alley where he took bribes from criminals. The newspaper smoked out the government's illegal use of torture to extract information from prisoners during the war. smoke outExpose, reveal, bring to public view, as in Reporters thrive on smoking out a scandal. This expression alludes to driving a person or animal out of a hiding place by filling it with smoke. [Late 1500s] smoke outv. 1. To force someone or something out of a place by or as if by the use of smoke: The groundskeeper smoked out the gopher. The police smoked the fugitives out of their hideout. 2. To detect and bring someone or something to public view; expose or reveal someone or something: The media was quick to smoke out the scandal. The ruse was successful in smoking the culprit out. smoke someone/something out, toTo drive someone/something into the open. The term alludes to the practice of driving a person or animal out of hiding by starting a fire, so that the smoke will force them out. The term has been used figuratively since the early twentieth century. “Speculators were ‘smoked out’ by a Congressional inquiry” appeared in the New York Times (1948). |
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