释义 |
WordReference Random House Learner's Dictionary of American English © 2024mouse /n. maʊs; v. maʊz/USA pronunciation n., pl. mice /maɪs/USA pronunciation v., moused, mous•ing. n. [countable] - Mammalsa small rodent having a long, thin tail.
- a quiet, timid person:"Are you a man or a mouse?'' she yelled.
- Computinga palm-sized device equipped with one or more buttons, used to point at and select items on a computer display screen and to control the movement of the cursor:He used the mouse to move the cursor.
v. [no object] - to prowl about, as if in search of something:mousing around.
- to hunt for or catch mice.
WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2024mouse (n. mous;v. mouz),USA pronunciation n., pl. mice (mīs),USA pronunciation v., moused, mous•ing. n. - Mammalsany of numerous small Old World rodents of the family Muridae, esp. of the genus Mus, introduced widely in other parts of the world.
- any similar small animal of various rodent and marsupial families.
- a quiet, timid person.
- Computinga palm-sized, button-operated device that can be slid on wheels or ball bearings over a desktop to move the cursor on a CRT to any position, or slid over a drawing in order to recreate the drawing on a CRT. Cf. joystick (def. 2).
- Informal Termsa swelling under the eye, caused by a blow or blows;
black eye. - Slang Terms, Sex and Gendera girl or woman.
v.t. - to hunt out, as a cat hunts out mice.
- [Naut.]to secure with a mousing.
v.i. - to hunt for or catch mice.
- to prowl about, as if in search of something:The burglar moused about for valuables.
- to seek or search stealthily or watchfully, as if for prey.
- bef. 900; Middle English mous (plural mis), Old English mūs (plural mȳs); cognate with German Maus, Old Norse mūs, Latin mūs, Greek mŷs
mouse′like′, adj. |