| 释义 | 
		Definition of switcheroo in English: switcheroonoun ˌswɪtʃəˈruːˌswɪtʃəˈru North American informal A change, reversal, or exchange, especially a surprising or deceptive one.  Example sentencesExamples -  Meanwhile, Laure's accomplice employs a switcheroo, replacing the diamonds with paste-and-glass.
 -  As the film drags on you realize that there's not going to be some big switcheroo or reveal.
 -  Or should I take my chances and leave them in the unchecked bag, since it might make it worse if he got wise to the switcheroo?
 -  But instead of the old switcheroo, I decide to wear the pumps straight to the interview.
 -  As the food supply has grown increasingly complex, manufacturers have taken the old switcheroo to new heights.
 -  Heaven knows that black cinema has years of bad caricature to make up for, and I got a good laugh out of the switcheroo.
 -  I waited for the old switcheroo but I got the same ticket back.
 -  I've got to start saving copies of these articles before the inevitable switcheroo. - Josh Marshall
 -  Will late September and early October result in yet another switcheroo in the ever-fluctuating presidential polls?
 -  A number of elaborate switcheroos occur - more than you'd imagine would fit into one movie, actually - and we're left wondering who's going to get the gold: the good guys or the bad guys?
 -  In fact, the film does a complete switcheroo, stereotyping white people while ascending the protagonists to multi-dimensional character status.
 -  In other words, the Supreme Court has already decided issue, unless a mere word switcheroo makes a legal difference.
 -  The charismatic Studebaker gets a kick from pulling a quick switcheroo.
 -  With its insane mix of loves-me-loves-me-nots, switcheroos, flawed motives, crooked laughs and crying babies, it is one of cinema's most buoyant genres.
 -  But here's where we pull the switcheroo, here's where we totally fool everyone.
 -  An intriguing variant on two enduring film ideas: the deceased sent back to the world and the body switcheroo.
 -  I expected the league to create some kind of diversion while Payne pulled the old switcheroo, but there are no diversions.
 -  A little casting switcheroo could have helped considerably here.
 -  As ever for American movies, the body switcheroo is also a banal moral lesson.
 -  One way or another, we'll get to the bottom of this postmodern switcheroo.
 
 
 Origin   1930s: from the noun switch + -eroo in the sense 'unexpected'. Rhymes   accrue, adieu, ado, anew, Anjou, aperçu, askew, ballyhoo, bamboo, bedew, bestrew, billet-doux, blew, blue, boo, boohoo, brew, buckaroo, canoe, chew, clew, clou, clue, cock-a-doodle-doo, cockatoo, construe, coo, Corfu, coup, crew, Crewe, cru, cue, déjà vu, derring-do, dew, didgeridoo, do, drew, due, endue, ensue, eschew, feu, few, flew, flu, flue, foreknew, glue, gnu, goo, grew, halloo, hereto, hew, Hindu, hitherto, how-do-you-do, hue, Hugh, hullabaloo, imbrue, imbue, jackaroo, Jew, kangaroo, Karroo, Kathmandu, kazoo, Kiangsu, knew, Kru, K2, kung fu, Lahu, Lanzhou, Lao-tzu, lasso, lieu, loo, Lou, Manchu, mangetout, mew, misconstrue, miscue, moo, moue, mu, nardoo, new, non-U, nu, ooh, outdo, outflew, outgrew, peekaboo, Peru, pew, plew, Poitou, pooh, pooh-pooh, potoroo, pursue, queue, revue, roo, roux, rue, Selous, set-to, shampoo, shih-tzu, shoe, shoo, shrew, Sioux, skean dhu, skew, skidoo, slew, smew, snafu, sou, spew, sprue, stew, strew, subdue, sue, taboo, tattoo, thereto, thew, threw, thro, through, thru, tickety-boo, Timbuktu, tiramisu, to, to-do, too, toodle-oo, true, true-blue, tu-whit tu-whoo, two, vendue, view, vindaloo, virtu, wahoo, wallaroo, Waterloo, well-to-do, whereto, whew, who, withdrew, woo, Wu, yew, you, zoo    Definition of switcheroo in US English: switcheroonounˌswiCHəˈro͞oˌswɪtʃəˈru North American informal A change, reversal, or exchange, especially a surprising or deceptive one.  Example sentencesExamples -  In fact, the film does a complete switcheroo, stereotyping white people while ascending the protagonists to multi-dimensional character status.
 -  But here's where we pull the switcheroo, here's where we totally fool everyone.
 -  Will late September and early October result in yet another switcheroo in the ever-fluctuating presidential polls?
 -  I waited for the old switcheroo but I got the same ticket back.
 -  But instead of the old switcheroo, I decide to wear the pumps straight to the interview.
 -  Heaven knows that black cinema has years of bad caricature to make up for, and I got a good laugh out of the switcheroo.
 -  I've got to start saving copies of these articles before the inevitable switcheroo. - Josh Marshall
 -  The charismatic Studebaker gets a kick from pulling a quick switcheroo.
 -  As ever for American movies, the body switcheroo is also a banal moral lesson.
 -  A little casting switcheroo could have helped considerably here.
 -  As the food supply has grown increasingly complex, manufacturers have taken the old switcheroo to new heights.
 -  As the film drags on you realize that there's not going to be some big switcheroo or reveal.
 -  In other words, the Supreme Court has already decided issue, unless a mere word switcheroo makes a legal difference.
 -  A number of elaborate switcheroos occur - more than you'd imagine would fit into one movie, actually - and we're left wondering who's going to get the gold: the good guys or the bad guys?
 -  Meanwhile, Laure's accomplice employs a switcheroo, replacing the diamonds with paste-and-glass.
 -  One way or another, we'll get to the bottom of this postmodern switcheroo.
 -  I expected the league to create some kind of diversion while Payne pulled the old switcheroo, but there are no diversions.
 -  An intriguing variant on two enduring film ideas: the deceased sent back to the world and the body switcheroo.
 -  With its insane mix of loves-me-loves-me-nots, switcheroos, flawed motives, crooked laughs and crying babies, it is one of cinema's most buoyant genres.
 -  Or should I take my chances and leave them in the unchecked bag, since it might make it worse if he got wise to the switcheroo?
 
 
 Origin   1930s: from the noun switch + -eroo in the sense ‘unexpected’.     |