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bootleg    音标拼音: [b'utl,ɛg]
vt.
vi. 私卖(酒)

私卖(酒)

bootleg
adj 1: distributed or sold illicitly; "the black economy pays no
taxes" [synonym: {bootleg}, {black}, {black-market},
{contraband}, {smuggled}]
n 1: whiskey illegally distilled from a corn mash [synonym:
{moonshine}, {bootleg}, {corn liquor}]
2: the part of a boot above the instep
v 1: sell illicit products such as drugs or alcohol; "They were
bootlegging whiskey"
2: produce or distribute illegally; "bootleg tapes of the diva's
singing"

bootleg \bootleg\ adj.
distributed or sold illicitly; especially, imported
illegally.

Syn: black-market, contraband, smuggled.
[WordNet 1.5]


bootleg \bootleg\ v.
1. to sell illicit products such as drugs or alcohol.

Syn: smuggle.
[WordNet 1.5]

2. to produce alcohol illegally.
[WordNet 1.5]


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  • etymology - What is the origin of bootleg? - English Language Usage . . .
    6 What is the origin of 'bootleg' ('bootlegger', 'bootlegging'), in the general sense of "illicit trade in liquor" (OED)? The Online Etymology Dictionary gives one possible origin, from 1889: As an adjective in reference to illegal liquor, 1889, American English slang, from the trick of concealing a flask of liquor down the leg of a high boot
  • word choice - In the Internet vs. on the Internet - English . . .
    I suppose the large number of "in" prepositions in the phrase can be explained like this: in many languages, including Russian we use the preposition which can be translated into English as "in" So what people often do when they don't know what the correct way is - they "copy" exactly as it's told in their native language I guess the number of native speakers who use the Internet is much
  • Can you use amok without run? How? - English Language Usage Stack . . .
    1922 Bookman Mar 23 2 Both go morris-dancing amuck on a case of bootleg liquor 2003 B Klähn in K Stierstorfer Beyond Postmodernism 86 A sports-car pilot driving amok on a French coastal road
  • run-down versus rundown - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    In The Complete Poems of Anna Akhmatova by Judith Hemschemeyer, we read: In this everyday gray dress, On rundown heels I thought that quot;rundown quot; was a substantive and quot;run-down q
  • Whence comes the expression ‘’starve a cold, feed a fever?”
    What is the origin of the expression quot;starve a cold, feed a fever quot;? It is is used as basic (perhaps incorrect) medical advice for common illnesses
  • Utilise or Utilize - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    I am writing in UK English and would like to confirm that we use utilise instead of utilize I cannot seem to find a answer for this online
  • Our heart or our hearts - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Google ngrams show that both 'our heart goes out to' and 'our hearts go out to' are used, the latter being much the more common, emphasising the level of concern rather than the unity of those concerned But with metaphorical usages especially, the distributive singular is common 'The boys wanted to get something off their chest but had a change of heart '
  • What is the plural form of status? - English Language Usage Stack . . .
    There are some situations where status may be considered countable In those cases, the plural form can be used as statuses MacMillan dictionary gives 4 definitions for status, and 3 of them are referred to as countable Personally, I would use status as the plural form instead of statuses
  • grammar - require or requires? (verb agreement) - English Language . . .
    The subject of this sentence is "Achieving goals", and it is singular The examples you mention do not make your subject plural Therefore, it would be "requires" This is subject-verb agreement but should also fall under the gerund (achieving is a verb that operates as a noun) category
  • Difference between social and societal - English Language Usage . . .
    Social has over 500M hits in NGrams, as opposed to only 7M for the more recent societal So the main difference is OP probably always wants to use the former, because that's the standard word and it covers all meanings Societal is the more recent word for of [human] society, which is its only meaning It's primarily used in academic writing, so OP is unlikely to need it





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