The act of searching someone for concealed weapons or illegal drugs.
Синонимы
Examples for "sport "
Examples for "sport "
1 Organised sport has meant a great deal of different things throughout history.
2 He said the move would likely help children stay in sport longer.
3 The app includes breaking news, sport content and access to business news.
4 At least he was a good sport about the whole situation, right?
5 They can also provide good points of vantage, good sport - kickoff ,flight ,stopping
1 And in this cool freshness we hear the song of the lark :
2 A wicker cage, with a lark in it, hung in the window.
3 The lark began to soar and sing once more in English skies.
4 Actually, I thought The Human Centipede was a bit of a lark .
5 Alan has to be up with the lark to present Ireland AM.
1 Some of the young gentlemen in the town joined in the frolic .
2 They deserve a frolic before we set out to the far north.
3 After lunch, the young people went for a frolic in the snow.
4 After a while Nurse came in with baby and interrupted the frolic .
5 That is the fault with frolic ; there is always an inescapable rebound.
1 For some it was a boisterous romp , for others a joyless reality.
2 Only in horse racing do rank outsiders regularly romp home as winners.
3 The sermon is discussed and the children forbidden to romp or laugh.
4 They really are selling the thing as some sort of careering romp .
5 No need to jeopardize either for a weekend romp with the boss.
1 She has the flight of a skylark let out of a cage.
2 A skylark was the first target, and it fell for the ox.
3 Throstle and skylark to be admired must be heard at a distance.
4 You have all the quick and easy graces of the skylark .
5 To the ordinary observer the Indian skylark is indistinguishable from its European congener.
1 She set her pups down, and let them gambol on the grass.
2 Jan would probably gambol about him with never a thought of suspicion.
3 Winged mermen support the upper basin; sea-creatures gambol in the lower.
4 But I gambol in spirit like a hawk in the air.
5 Through the roofs and rafters gambol all sorts of wretched pests.
1 Pigeons were seen to always disport in the houses of the Vrishnis.
2 A garden would do me good, in which I could disport myself.
3 This is the night when unlicked cubs do disport themselves in our precincts.
4 There are avenues of water-pots, who disport themselves much in squirting up cascadelins.
5 Upon whose sloping shores disport the enormous mastodon, the stately megatherium, the tremendous-eh?
1 They didn't want to chat; they just wanted to watch Charlie cavort .
2 The professor did not cavort when this statement came from his daughter.
3 They nibble giant strawberries and cavort inside transparent spheres, naked as newborns.
4 During whale watching season, whales and their offspring cavort whilst canoeists carefully circle.
5 I'm a drunken, chemical-besotted playboy who does nothing but cavort , sleep, and feed.
1 And he had a good strong voice with a rollick in it.
2 Humour may rollick on high planes of fantasy or in depths of silliness.
3 Your friend Parrish was not a man you would expect to rollick , I imagine?''
4 Pocket full enough to have a rollick with you.
5 All this coming away and leaving him in that dreary place while I rollick in heaven.
1 I want to help save the city, not run around carrying gossip.
2 Combat sorcerers are too dangerous to be allowed to run around unsupervised.
3 You run around for five minutes, so I think it was tough.
4 Estimates of error rates in early RNA replication run around 20 percent.
5 Rats run around in them day and night and fight and squeak.
1 They must have been dining, sir, and seemed more inclined to lark about than to listen to good music.
2 The Unthanks tend to lark about onstage, but when they play they infuse their work with a rare sensuality and seriousness.
3 The height was over eighty feet; but the descent was a mere nothing for Dick, accustomed to lark about in the rigging of a man-o'-war.
4 Well, he larks about with 'em, but he just flirts for sport.
5 Suddenly the same group is a gang of children larking about at football.
1 Politely they asked if they might frisk me, then allowed me in.
2 The love of Nothus makes her frisk about like a wanton she-goat.
3 He gave the corpse a quick frisk pat-down that came up empty.
4 Whenever the fawn caught up, he was quite content to frisk about.
5 He sat down, he was so frightened he could not frisk about.
6 Edward Fordyce looked at her, puzzled and still angry about the frisk .
7 You cover, make the frisk , and put the blindfold over my eyes.
8 Not surprisingly, stop and frisk tactics overwhelmingly target Black and Latino men.
9 Sherry said you used to like to frisk her in the ninth grade.
10 They danced for the sake of motion, as lambs frisk in a meadow.
11 These are same hucksters who stated that stop and frisk worked.
12 Police in Ciudad Juárez frisk a man during a security sweep.
13 Joe Biden echoed the sentiment, saying that Bloomberg's apologies for stop - and - frisk were insufficient.
14 He put it away, out of reach, and resumed the frisk .
15 The pale sprite nodded curtly, then continued to frisk K-Max's person.
16 A whole morning to make cowslip balls, she added with a little frisk .
Other examples for "frisk"
Grammar, pronunciation and more
About this term Verb
Indicative · Present
Frisk across language varieties