spook
n. 鬼; 幽靈; <俚>出沒無常行蹤古怪的人; 間諜
vt. 鬼怪般地出沒; 嚇唬,恐嚇; (因受驚嚇而)逃竄
A spook is a ghost.
A spook is a spy.
...as a US intelligence spook said yesterday.
據昨天一位美國情報員所說…
If people are spooked, something has scared them or made them nervous.
But was it the wind that spooked her?...
但會是風嚇到她了嗎?
Investors were spooked by slowing economies.
經濟增長速度的放慢讓投資者神經緊張。
1. someone unpleasantly strange or eccentric
2. a mental representation of some haunting experience;
1. frighten or scare, and often provoke into a violent action;
If you get a litter spook aroud here at night. Lean back ground , put a few lights on.
要是你晚上覺得有點恐怖, 你可以多開幾盞燈.
Don't let the repoter spook you, and you have to behave urbanely.
別讓記者纏住你, 而你還得舉止文雅.
The father, Son, and Holy Ghost are not referred to as Daddy, Junior and the spook.
聖父 、 聖子和聖靈不是說成爸爸, 兒子和鬼魂.
Or round in circles, added Spook.
“或者在轉圈.”斯布克加了一句.
Why don't you go inside, Spook? said Aaron.
“你為什麼不進去看個究竟, 斯布克? ”亞倫說.