英语释义
1. vagrant, tramp
2. a dishonest or worthless person scoundrel
3. a mischievous person scamp
4. a horse inclined to shirk or misbehave
5. an individual exhibiting a chance and usually inferior biological variation
6. to weed out inferior, diseased, or nontypical individuals from a crop plant or a field
7. resembling or suggesting a rogue elephant especially in being isolated, aberrant, dangerous, or uncontrollable
capsized by a rogue wave
8. corrupt, dishonest
rogue cops
9. of or being a nation whose leaders defy international law or norms of international behavior
rogue states
10. to begin to behave in an independent or uncontrolled way that is not authorized, normal, or expected
Before the Clemson Tigers played Notre Dame in Arlington, Texas on Saturday, Clark [a bald eagle] was supposed to fly around the stadium, high above people's heads. But instead, he went rogue and decided to perch on two unsuspecting fans.
— Nicole Gallucci Anders had been sent to the Amazon to monitor the program's progress under the formidable Dr. Annick Swensen (who may have gone rogue and is no longer returning the company's calls).
— Yvonne Zipp Whenever a member of a group goes rogue, you can be absolutely certain that other members of that group will pop up with the "bad apple" defense, as in, "Well, sure, there's a few bad apples in every bunch, but that's the exception."
— Christine Flowers
11. river about 200 miles (320 kilometers) long in southwestern Oregon rising in Crater Lake National Park and flowing west and southwest into the Pacific Ocean
12. a man who is dishonest or immoral
13. a man who causes trouble in a playful way
14. a dishonest or evil person
15. a pleasantly mischievous person