sellout的意思和读音

sellout

: [ˈselˌaʊt] : ['selˌaʊt]

n.[]();()

sellouts  

n.flop,loyalist,loyalty

n.hit,smash hit,smash,bestseller,success

n.1.;[]()2.(),3.;;

n.1.a performance, sports event, etc. for which all the tickets are sold2.a situation in which someone does something that is the opposite of what they had promised or that seems to be against their principles

1. second half: . sellout: . semifinals: . ...

2. PROTEST SELLOUT RIST ...

3. ) volunteer ) sellout ) auditorium ...

4. racial sellout unwilling ...

5. onsale sellout outofstock ...

6. MangoSmoothies: sellout fruit pizza: ...

7. sell-out-- sellout senddown 使... ...

8. ) volunteer ) sellout ) auditorium ...

:,,[],,,,

1.It was a sellout that might be compared to this hypothetical situation: Suppose the United States was at war with the Soviet Union.

2.I suppose you think I'm greedy, unscrupulous sellout and do about anything for money?

3.It remains to be seen what Sharpton makes of his opportunity, but the fact that he has it doesn't mean he should be condemned as a sellout.使

4.He would be called a sellout akin to Peter Orszag, who left government service to become a vice chairman at Citigroup.(Citigroup)·(PeterOrszag)

5.NARRATOR: To some of his supporters, the president's change of heart on NAFTA was nothing less than a sellout.

6.'It's busy, but certainly not a sellout, ' said Miles Quest, spokesman for the British Hospitality Association.(BritishHospitalityAssociation)(MilesQuest)

7.King George's forbidding mother wrote to him, exasperated that more people in the House of Commons had not cheered the sellout.

8.A racial sellout unwilling to stand up for himself? Carter gets angry at the thought.

9.The more serious criticism comes from those inside the profession who see a move into the mainstream as a sellout.

10.Some people say Patricia Barber is a sellout because she's a popular jazz musician as opposed to a starving jazz musician.西·