| 释义 | fer·ret I. \ˈferə̇t, usu -ə̇d.+V\ noun
 (-s)
 Etymology: Middle English feret, ferret, furet, from Middle French furet, fuiret, from (assumed) Vulgar Latin furittus, literally, small thief, diminutive of Latin fur thief — more at furtive
 1.
 a.  : a semidomesticated variety of the European polecat sometimes treated as a separate species (Mustela furo) that is usually albino with red eyes and is much used for hunting rodents and sometimes rabbits in Europe and occasionally in the United States
 b.  : black-footed ferret
 2.  : a person who searches actively and persistently (as for incriminating information)
 < German ferrets who constantly spied on the Allied prisoners of war >
 3.  : an airplane equipped to detect a radar installation and analyze its signals
 II. verb
 (-ed/-ing/-s)
 Etymology: Middle English fereten, fureten, from feret, furet, n.
 transitive verb
 1.  : to hunt with a ferret:
 a.  : to hunt over
 < they have ferreted the duke's fields >
 b.  : to hunt for : take; especially  : to drive especially from covert
 < they ferreted a number of rabbits >
 2.  : to worry or harry as with a ferret
 < the king kept ferreting the rebellious baron >
 intransitive verb
 1.  : to hunt game or drive out vermin with a ferret
 < some United States states have laws against ferreting >
 2.  : to search carefully or diligently and sometimes presumptuously : search about : pry
 < old-fashioned … to go ferreting into people's pasts — Virginia Woolf >
 III. noun
 also fer·ret·ing \-ə̇d.iŋ\
 (-s)
 Etymology: ferret from earlier ferret silk, probably modification of Italian fioretti floss silk, from plural of fioretto small flower, diminutive of fiore flower, from Latin flor-, flos; ferreting from ferret + -ing — more at blow (blossom)
 1.  : a narrow silk tape or ribbon for trimming or decorative lacing
 2.  : a strong tape of cotton or wool for binding or shoelaces
 |