ricochet



Y

n. (名詞 noun)

          1.    跳飛,【軍】跳彈

vi. (不及物動詞 intransitive verb)

          1.    跳飛,【軍】跳射

vt. (及物動詞 transitive verb)

          1.    使跳飛,【軍】用跳彈射擊 

 
Centering on the dreamscape rambles of an unnamed protagonist (played by Wiley Wiggins, who also served as one of the film's animators), the movie takes on Slacker's free-form approach, ricocheting [from] one conversation [to] the next with just a [hint] of a narrative.


。砍殺
。顫慄
。扭捏 
Convulsion

。投射
hoist
Do as I ask! Hoist that GI ass on the deuce!
lunge
plunge, a sudden forward thrust, as with a sword 
lunging his [finger] accusingly. 
I like the way his characters lunge at experience
sling
slinging [burgers] and [onion rings] to the rare customer
When we see Nikolai and Kirill slinging a [body] into the coffee-colored Thames,
to sling a [rifle] over one's shoulder. 
to sling a hammock between two [trees].  
hammock
cot
Look. What did he do? Nothing! I didn't do anything! Dad sleeps on a cot.
I got a cot in the back. Folks get scared to go home, they spend the night.
fling
and Solene, a friend of Margot's who isn't against the idea of a brief [fling].
but Vincent Cassel literally flings [himself ]into the role of his [wastrel] son Kirill,
to fling a [stone]. 
to fling a [suspect] into jail.  
She flung [herself] angrily from the room.   
(speak) He flung [out] disgustedly [against] the whole human race.  
The week of [partying] was my last [fling] before starting a new job. 
He took a fling at [playwriting].  
and you will jump when that shower curtain gets [flung] open even if there's nothing scarier than a hairy bar of soap waiting on the other side.

pounce
to swoop down suddenly and grasp
Every competitor we ever took a shot at, they're going to pounce. And they should, because we blew it, Caitlin.
but funny like at the office when some jerk makes enemies, and his enemies [pounce].
swoop
The [hawk] swooped [down] and seized the rabbit.
Besides something called a temperament, whch consists mostly of swooping [about] on a broomstick and screaming at the top of my voice.
catapult 
He was catapulted to [fame].
The [boy] catapulted [out] of the house.
hurl
late in the movie she hurls [herself] off a balcony as if into a mosh pit.
ricochet
the movie [takes on] Slacker's free-form [approach], 
ricocheting [from] one conversation [to] the next with just a [hint] of a narrative.
trampoline
You have a trampoline?
pogo
Nor, I am sure, could anyone present tell you, how Caswell read or rode a pogo stick. 彈簧單高蹺


。追趕跑跳
stampede
sudden, frenzied rush or headlong flight of a herd of frightened animals, esp. cattle or horses 
But there was this huge stampede, and all the people that fainted got run over, and you could hear their bones breaking.
cavort  
does anyone remember when Brolin 
was still cavorting [around] in films like Hollow Man?
cf. caper
prance
she never seems happier than when prancing [around] in her underwear and a pair of nine-inch heels. 
scamper
run or go hastily, as a child 
The camera [hastens] after the Ram, [scampers] backs as he advances
Without a clue what to expect, the Englishmen remain cautiously reserved as the naturals scamper [about],
A [child] runs boldly toward the house, and scampers away again.
scuttle
run or move with short hurried movements; scurry.
Ray's plans are quickly [scuttled] by his acerbic and controlling father
scurry
Franz [grooms] himself in preparation for Leopold's return from the business world, [scurrying] to greet him in cutely suspendered short-shorts.
Roeg masterfully plays with psychological themes and Venice's labyrinthine settings, using images of a red-coated figure [scurrying] along the canals to create an almost unbearable emotional intensity.








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