释义 |
Definition of rough trot in English: rough trotnoun Australian, NZ informal A period of hardship or misfortune. he's the first to concede that the company's had a rough trot Example sentencesExamples - He has been having a rough trot with police after also being arrested in Surfers Paradise in January this year for being drunk in public.
- As Jude put it, "The chemo is a rough trot."
- Getting a ticket in those circumstances might be seen as a rough trot, but my untrained eye does not detect anything that suggests the law was not broken.
- Liz had a rough trot in her teens but seems to have sown the seeds for a personal transformation after a couple of months with a psychologist who practices cognitive behavioural therapy.
- He can take heart from the fact that Australia's three Test captains before him also experienced rough trots before emerging from the mire to score freely again.
- The Vietnam veteran said the families of the airmen had had "a rough trot over the last 39 years."
- The Tour de France champion has endured a rough trot with his health this year and his team says he's suffering a "suspected low grade infection".
- Isn't playing games at a traditional suburban ground something a tribalist should support, especially when, during a rough trot, the ground can accommodate quite a few home games?
- The seven-year-old has had a rough trot recently and is currently sporting a full cast past her elbow, so her 34-year-old mother decided to treat her to some TLC.
- Kids just get a bit of a rough trot sometimes in the sense that their parents have their own agendas and they're sort of placing those onto their children.
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