| 其他翻译 |
| snatch n | vulgar, offensive, informal (female genitals) (无礼,俚语) | SCSimplified Chinese (女性的)阴部 nǚ xìng de yīn bù |
| | Tim pulled up Emily's dress to see her snatch. |
| snatch n | (fragment) | SCSimplified Chinese 只言片语 zhǐ yán piàn yǔ TCTraditional Chinese 只言片語 |
| | | SCSimplified Chinese 片段 zhǐ yán piàn yǔ ,piàn duàn |
| | From her seat in the corner of the crowded café, Allison could hear snatches of conversation. |
| snatch n | (short period of time) | SCSimplified Chinese 片刻 piàn kè TCTraditional Chinese 片刻 |
| | | SCSimplified Chinese 一小段时间 |
| | Sometimes there would be brief snatches when Peter forgot about Amanda completely. |
| snatch n | UK, informal (robbery) | SCSimplified Chinese 抢劫 qiǎng jié TCTraditional Chinese 搶劫 |
| | The robbers were organising a jewel snatch. |
| snatch at vi + prep | (attempt to grab) | SCSimplified Chinese 一把抓住 |
| | Nancy snatched at the end of the rope, but couldn't manage to catch hold of it. |
| snatch [sth] vtr | (steal) | SCSimplified Chinese 偷走 tōu zǒu |
| | | SCSimplified Chinese 窃走 |
| | The thieves snatched the diamonds from the jeweller's display. |
| snatch [sth] vtr | (take hurriedly) | SCSimplified Chinese 抽出(时间),抽空做,抓紧时间做 |
| | | SCSimplified Chinese 抓住(机会) |
| | After his night out, Adam snatched a couple of hours sleep before getting up for work. |
| snatch [sth] vtr | (gain by narrow margin) | SCSimplified Chinese 险胜 xiǎn shèng |
| | The home team snatched victory in the last minutes of the game. |
| snatch [sb]⇒ vtr | informal (kidnap) | SCSimplified Chinese 绑架 bǎng jià |
| | | SCSimplified Chinese 绑走 |
| | The man snatched Betty as she walked along the street in broad daylight. |
snatch [sth] away, snatch [sth] back vtr + adv | (remove suddenly) | SCSimplified Chinese 一把抽开 TCTraditional Chinese 一把抽開 |
| | | SCSimplified Chinese 劈手夺过 |
| | Sally snatched her hand away when Josh tried to take hold of it. |