Online Google Dictionary

badger 中文解釋 wordnet sense Collocation Usage Collins Definition
Verb
/ˈbajər/,
Font size:

badgers, plural;
  1. Ask (someone) repeatedly and annoyingly for something; pester
    • - journalists badgered him about the deals
    • - Tom had finally badgered her into going
    • - his daughter was always badgering him to let her join
Noun
  1. A heavily built omnivorous nocturnal mammal of the weasel family, typically having a gray and black coat

  2. A native of Wisconsin


  1. Wisconsinite: a native or resident of Wisconsin
  2. tease: annoy persistently; "The children teased the boy because of his stammer"
  3. persuade through constant efforts
  4. sturdy carnivorous burrowing mammal with strong claws; widely distributed in the northern hemisphere
  5. Badgers, occasionally referred to as brocks, are short-legged, heavy-set omnivores in the weasel biological family, Mustelidae. ...
  6. Operation Upshot-Knothole was a series of eleven nuclear test shots conducted in 1953 at the Nevada Test Site.
  7. Hiawatha Service or Hiawatha is the name of an train route operated by Amtrak on the western shore of Lake Michigan, although the name was historically applied to several different routes that extended across the Midwest and out to the Pacific Ocean. ...
  8. Badger was a British rock band from the early 1970s.
  9. The Badger is a comic book character and series created by writer Mike Baron in 1983.
  10. Badger is a fictional character from the animated children's television series The Animals of Farthing Wood, based upon the books of the same name by author Colin Dann.
  11. (BADGERS) A crew of desperate villains who robbed near rivers, into which they threw the bodies of those they murdered.
  12. (badgers) (in  badger (mammal))
  13. (Bad'-ger) A mammalian animal found in England and on the Continent. It is often used in heraldry. It is sometimes called a gray and also a brock.
  14. term applied to a residue of pulp remaining in the vat after papermaking is completed.
  15. A feather of a specially bred or chosen chicken that has colors which change from brown--black to black at the center of the quill to ginger or white on the outer edges.
  16. To dream of a badger, is a sign of luck after battles with hardships.
  17. No mention of the badger (meles taxus) is found in the D.V., whereas the A.V. regularly gives it as the English equivalent for táhásh. The skin of the táhásh is repeatedly spoken of as used for the outer cover of the tabernacle and the several pieces of its furniture. ...
  18. The name of the University of Sussex Students' Union weekly newspaper.
  19. licensed pauper who wore a badge with the letter P on it and could only work in a defined area (the term "Badgering comes from this"). A corn miller or dealer or an itinerant food trader
  20. a broad brush (traditionally made of badger hair) used to spread glass paint evenly
  21. This word is found in Exo 25:5; Exo 26:14; Exo 35:7, Exo 35:23; Exo 36:19; Exo 39:34; Num 4:6, etc. The tabernacle was covered with badgers' skins; the shoes of women were also made of them (Eze 16:10). ...
  22. A type of hair coloring that consists of a fine blending of brown, grey, black, and white.
  23. a person who buys and sells basic commodities acting as a middleman in a transaction.
  24. A travelling dealer in victuals, corn, etc.
  25. A flamethrower equipped tank. The first Badgers were Ram Kangaroos with the Wasp II flamethrowing equipment (as used on the Universal Carrier) installed in place of the bow MG. Later models were turret rams with the equipment in place of the main gun.