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stakeout
[ steyk-out ]
noun
- the surveillance of a location by the police, as in anticipation of a crime or the arrival of a wanted person.
- the place from which such surveillance is carried out.
- something that is bounded or separated by or as if by stakes, especially property, territory, or the like that one identifies or claims as one's own.
stakeout
/ 藞蝉迟别瑟办补蕣迟 /
noun
- a police surveillance of an area, house, or criminal suspect
- an area or house kept under such surveillance
verb
- tr, adverb to keep under surveillance
亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins
Origin of stakeout1
Example Sentences
French media published a photo from the police stakeout, which shows several of the men having coffee and chatting at a Parisian caf茅 that winter, just before their arrest.
鈥淲e found the car he drove through a few other members that did a stakeout.鈥
The music cues are refreshingly offbeat; a character whispers the 鈥淕reen Acres鈥 theme during a nighttime stakeout in a corn field, and the show reprises its fondness for the novelty songs of Roger Miller.
Garland is strongest with impressions: chirping birds over bloody lawns, the laconic humor of exhausted soldiers on a stakeout, a quick shot of Lee deleting some of her own photos, a private mode of self-care.
An abandoned WeWork office 鈥 the perfect place for a stakeout 鈥 and a running gag about using sitcom names as aliases bring to mind the anti-corporate glint of 鈥淔ight Club.鈥
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