释义 |
WordReference Random House Learner's Dictionary of American English © 2024mob /mɑb/USA pronunciation n., adj., v., mobbed, mob•bing. n. [countable] - a disorderly crowd of people:angry mobs of protesters.
- the common people:[singular* the + ~]rule by the mob.
- Sociology[Informal.]a criminal gang involved in organized crime:the most powerful mob in the area.
adj. [before a noun] - of or by the common people:degenerated into mob rule.
v. [~ + object] - to crowd around noisily, as from curiosity or hostility:Fans mobbed the actor.
- to attack in a riotous mob:The crowd mobbed the consulate.
- to fill with people;
crowd:The theater was mobbed with people trying to get in. -mob-, root. - -mob- comes from Latin, where it has the meaning "move.'' It is related to -mot- and -mov-. This meaning is found in such words as: automobile, demobilize, immobile, immobilize, mobile, mobility, mobilize, snowmobile.
WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2024mob (mob),USA pronunciation n., adj., v., mobbed, mob•bing. n. - a disorderly or riotous crowd of people.
- a crowd bent on or engaged in lawless violence.
- any group or collection of persons or things.
- the common people;
the masses; populace or multitude. - Sociologya criminal gang, esp. one involved in drug trafficking, extortion, etc.
- Sociologythe Mob, Mafia (def. 1).
- Sociologya group of persons stimulating one another to excitement and losing ordinary rational control over their activity.
- Animal Husbandrya flock, herd, or drove of animals:a mob of sheep.
adj. - Sociologyof, pertaining to, or characteristic of a lawless, irrational, disorderly, or riotous crowd:mob rule; mob instincts.
- directed at or reflecting the lowest intellectual level of the common people:mob appeal; the mob mentality.
v.t. - to crowd around noisily, as from curiosity or hostility:Spectators mobbed the courtroom.
- to attack in a riotous mob:The crowd mobbed the consulate.
- Sport[Fox Hunting.]to chop (a fox).
- short for Latin mōbile vulgus the movable (i.e., changeable, inconstant) common people 1680–90
mob′ber, mob′bist, n. mob′bish, adj. mob′bish•ly, adv. mob′bish•ness, n. mob′bism, n. |