Flee; take to one's heels; cut and run.
Singing jazz; the singer substitutes nonsense syllables for the words of the song and tries to sound like a musical instrument.
Синонимы
Examples for "run "
Examples for "run "
1 The banks' recent run of good form came to an end today.
2 This year the work will likely run out months earlier, Olson said.
3 The critical issue now is whether the run of good news continues.
4 I had run quite far and was a long way from home.
5 Rice said the two shows would run at different times of year.
1 Last year his parents decided he should try to escape to Europe.
2 How can this visit help me answer the question I can't escape ?
3 Neither side will escape challenge: this research will impact on the vote.
4 They allow people to escape their reality and enter a new one.
5 Now he decided a different course of escape might be in order.
1 The next moment the boy heard Thede moving in the bunk above.
2 In the darkness, cylinder in hand, I crept softly from the bunk .
3 When Harold was in his bunk the little maid was brought in.
4 Long, frightening howls carried by the wind into our open bunk windows.
5 The man in the bunk in the lumbermen's camp is wild again.
1 Cash and calls weren't the only thing Massino got on the lam .
2 Stinker is a bargee, but he was quite right to lam me.
3 We're both on the lam now. He glanced idly toward the woman.
4 I'm liable to lam your head off, threatened the big man sullenly.
5 De way that gal lam me across the head was a caution!
1 But we can't give them a lick of warning or they'll scarper .
2 A commotion around the van followed and eventually the driver had to scarper .
3 We wait below, light fuses and scarper when the fuckin' train hits the bridge.
4 It's no wonder they scarper off so quickly.
5 Not like with Liz Stride, just a slash at the throat and a scarper in the dark.
1 Let us take to the woods and we will give them hell.
2 We cannot all take to the woods and swamps as Thoreau did.
3 I saw nothing for it but to take to the woods .
4 I always have a bite with me when I take to the woods .
5 For you and yours must even take to the woods for a while.
1 Didn't I give you six hours to fly the coop ?
2 Because the goose was about to fly the coop .
3 We'll leave you here and fly the coop .
4 Just in case you were wondering where the expression ' fly the coop ' comes from, they're amazing escape artists.
5 Or if I asked the same question differently, was there a connection between our raid on Charabi's office and Bian's decision to fly the coop ?
1 It's time to break away from the failing and dysfunctional EU system.
2 The answer is not to break away , though, but to stay united.
3 Why does this province, specifically, want to break away from South Africa?
4 There's a strong possibility the Ukraine will break away and join him.
5 Anxiety and fear will remain until you deliberately break away and commit.
1 We came all the way across town to turn tail and run?
2 But he couldn't very well turn tail and bolt off the poop.
3 Half the children, upon seeing their leader turn tail and flee, followed suit.
4 Fala expected Kahg to turn tail and run, try to gain sky room.
5 He could not turn tail in the face of such an exalted opinion.
1 Common sense: I was supposed to run away , yell for help, etc.
2 Officials said he had run away from his family after an argument.
3 Tell her she should run away to sea and become a pirate.
4 You said you had no idea he was going to run away .
5 She wanted to believe Race's beautiful vision-thatthey could run away together.
1 That assault team will hightail it back to their base of operations.
2 I understand if you want to hightail it out of here.
3 They're afraid if they let on we're here, we'll hightail it somewhere else.
4 With this out-of-space drive they hightail it among the stars.
5 If you get into trouble, you can't just hightail it back inside the spaceship.
1 That likely the car would head for the hills , where the I.W.W.
2 That cat's gonna head for the hills the minute he sees an opportunity.
3 In a real revolt, the rich and powerful usually head for the hills , terrified.
4 When I tell him that, he'll head for the hills .
5 But remember, if you start a war, my friend, you better head for the hills .
1 Most tourists want to see the animals, not the just the scat .
2 Tells how Mozart, Liszt, and Brahms used scat , and its modern development.
3 The tail end of a scat of rain beat on their faces.
4 Nodelman kept me waiting, without offering me a scat , a good half-hour.
5 I swear, the stuff tasted like armadillo scat mixed with swamp water.
6 To add to the smells coming from the piss - and - scat place, Horace assumed.
7 A scat of a thing as I can manage with my thumb!
8 I never was so thunderin' scat in all my life, by gum!
9 I thank you for doing your duty, but now you need to scat .
10 Her disparate reference points range from scat singing to folk and meditative music.
11 Earl Thorfin sent Thorkel Fosterer to the islands to gather in his scat .
12 Biologists mostly rely on tracks and scat to document the reclusive animal's presence.
13 Many of the artists are also scat singers and jazz poets.
14 Someplace with a parking lot so she could hang up and then scat .
15 He saw burrows, he saw tracks and scat , but no rats.
16 Many critics felt he was at his best when allowed to improvise and scat .
Другие примеры для термина "scat"
Grammar, pronunciation and more
Scat в диалектах
Соединенные Штаты Америки